All articles


  • Campus & Community

    Armed robbery reported on Garden Street

    On Nov. 3 at approximately 2:30 a.m., a male undergraduate reported to the Harvard University Police Department (HUPD) that he was robbed at the corner of Garden and Sheppard streets. Three unidentified males, one of whom was armed with what appeared to be a handgun, approached the victim. The armed suspect then threw the victim…

  • Campus & Community

    President’s office hours

    Interim President Derek Bok will hold office hours for students in his Massachusetts Hall office from 3:30 to 5 p.m. on Dec. 11. Sign-up begins at 2:30 p.m., unless otherwise…

  • Campus & Community

    Police reports

    Following are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department (HUPD) for the week ending Nov. 6. The official log is located at 1033 Massachusetts Ave., sixth floor, and is available online at http://www.hupd.harvard.edu/.

  • Campus & Community

    Memorial services upcoming for Bower, Symonds, Clausen

    Symonds memorial service on Nov. 13 at Agassiz Theatre A memorial service for Alan Symonds, technical director for Harvard College Theatre Programs under the Office for the Arts at Harvard,…

  • Campus & Community

    Faculty Council

    At its fifth meeting of the year on Nov. 8, the Faculty Council discussed general education, and received a report from Dean Theda Skocpol on the activities of the Task…

  • Campus & Community

    HMS conference examines research on women’s aging

    With the decline in hormone replacement therapy in women, dermatologists like Sandy Tsao are seeing more patients with skin complaints.

  • Campus & Community

    Comprehensive model first to map protein folding at atomic level

    Scientists at Harvard University have developed a computer model that, for the first time, can fully map and predict how small proteins fold into three-dimensional, biologically active shapes. The work…

  • Campus & Community

    Children are attracted to the fortunate more than the unfortunate

    Children as young as 5 prefer lucky individuals over the less fortunate, according to new research by psychologists at Harvard and Stanford University. This phenomenon, the researchers say, could clarify…

  • Campus & Community

    Growth of spinal nerves is improved

    Nerves that control the highest level of voluntary movements have been isolated and secrets of their growth revealed for the first time. During development, these nerves extend themselves from the…

  • Campus & Community

    Alan J. Stone to step down

    Alan J. Stone, the University’s Vice President for Government, Community and Public Affairs since 2001, announced today (Nov. 8) that he will step down at the end of the 2006-07 academic year.

  • Campus & Community

    Little Lulu comes to Harvard

    The Little Lulu papers have found a home at the Schlesinger Library.

  • Campus & Community

    New curator of contemporary art is named

    The Harvard University Art Museums (HUAM) recently announced the appointment of Helen Molesworth as its new curator of contemporary art, effective Feb. 5, 2007. Molesworth becomes the first full curator of contemporary art since HUAM established the Department of Modern and Contemporary Art in 1997.

  • Campus & Community

    Glimchers are unusual father-daughter duo

    Laurie Glimcher remembers going into her father’s laboratory at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH) as a child, seeing beakers full of liquids being stirred automatically, and wondering not just what was in them, but what her father would learn from them.

  • Campus & Community

    How to face a nuclear North Korea

    Questions surrounding North Korea and its nascent nuclear weapons program took center stage Monday night (Oct. 30) at the John F. Kennedy Jr. Forum. Just hours before the North Koreans announced they would return to the six-party talks, a panel of defense experts and analysts discussed the range of policy options available to the United…

  • Campus & Community

    Capitalism as a dynamic force for social good

    As political and social repression of blacks raged across the Jim Crow South of the early 1900s, black merchants and entrepreneurs quietly prospered in business, cracking the door to future civil rights.

  • Campus & Community

    Historical society, HU Press join forces to digitize Adams papers

    With the Bay of Bengal in sight, they’re retyping 18th-century letters from the Adams family, which begot two American presidents. And they’re keying in diary entries written almost 400 years ago by John Winthrop, the first governor of the Massachusetts Bay Colony. For both Harvard and the historical society, the joint digitization project is the…

  • Campus & Community

    Human rights initiative announces new global fellowship

    The Joseph H. Flom Global Health and Human Rights Initiative at Harvard Law School (HLS) is a new partnership between the School’s Human Rights Program and its Petrie-Flom Center for Health Law Policy, Biotechnology, and Bioethics. Promoting academic research (as well as engagement in practical measures related to that research) for the purpose of bringing…

  • Campus & Community

    Sports in brief

    Football bounces Big Green, stays alive in title hunt The Harvard football team earned its first shutout since the 2004 season this past Saturday (Oct. 28) with a 28-0 blanking…

  • Campus & Community

    In brief

    Community Gifts kicks off season of giving November marks the beginning of the monthlong Community Gifts through Harvard campaign – the University’s workplace charitable giving campaign. The goal for this…

  • Campus & Community

    Walter Mosley shares ‘street philosophy’

    In a series of three talks last week (Oct. 24-26), novelist Walter Mosley explored the themes of redemption, forgiveness, and identity through his character, street philosopher Socrates Fortlow. The occasion was the annual Alain LeRoy Locke Lectures.

  • Campus & Community

    Du Bois Institute announces new institute administrator

    Nancy Brigham Cyr recently joined the W.E.B. Du Bois Institute for African and African American Research as the new institute administrator. She comes to the Du Bois Institute from Harvard University Health Services, where she served as budget director for seven years. Cyr has held several administrative positions at Harvard including department administrator at the…

  • Campus & Community

    Classicist, philologist ‘with a literary sensibility’ Clausen dies at 83

    Wendell Vernon Clausen, Pope Professor of the Latin Language and Literature Emeritus at Harvard University, died on Oct. 12, 2006, in Belmont, Mass. He was 83 years old, and had been in declining health after suffering a stroke in August 2005.

  • Campus & Community

    Experts talk state of the art … museum

    Emerson Hall was the scene recently of what Emerson himself always liked: a good conversation.

  • Campus & Community

    APA honors Susan Linn, HMS instructor, foe of marketing to children

    Highlighting her leadership in opposing marketing to children, the American Psychological Association (APA) has awarded Susan Linn, instructor in psychiatry at Harvard Medical School (HMS), its prestigious Presidential Citation. The award was presented Oct. 28 in Boston at the Campaign for Commercial-Free Childhood’s fifth annual summit, “Consuming Kids: Marketing in Schools and Beyond.”

  • Campus & Community

    President’s office hours

    Interim President Derek Bok will hold office hours for students in his Massachusetts Hall office from 3:30 to 5 p.m. on Dec. 11. Sign-up begins at 2:30 p.m., unless otherwise…

  • Campus & Community

    Memorial services upcoming for Symonds, Dunn, Mosteller

    Dunn memorial on Nov. 3 at the Memorial Church A memorial service for Charles W. Dunn, the Margaret Brooks Robinson Professor of Celtic Languages and Literatures Emeritus, will be held…

  • Campus & Community

    UHS flu clinics begin for high-risk adults

    Free flu shots are now available for high-risk adults every Monday and Tuesday from noon to 3 p.m. at Harvard University Health Services at Holyoke Center.

  • Campus & Community

    A searching look at terror of the gulag

    Reflections on terror, imagined and real, are making a visit to Boston this month, during an intentional confluence of events that explore the Soviet-era gulag.

  • Campus & Community

    Can torture ever be ethical?

    In 2004, German police captured a man they believed had kidnapped a young boy. They questioned him for two days, and then, fearing for the child’s safety, a senior officer authorized an interrogator to use pain, if necessary, to get information.

  • Campus & Community

    Gergen: Stem cell research essential to keep U.S. competitive in science

    For at least the past five years, the primary message of those seeking political and financial support for stem cell science has been that the research offers enormous hope of leading to treatments and cures for a myriad of diseases, including diabetes, cancer, heart disease, Parkinson’s, and even paralysis following spinal cord injury.