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  • Campus & Community

    Weatherhead Center awards 16 fellowships

    The Weatherhead Center for International Affairs at Harvard recently announced that it has awarded 16 fellowships for the 2006-07 academic year.

  • Campus & Community

    Sports in brief

    Galebach paces Crimson effort at New England Champs Senior cross country runner Tim Galebach placed third in the varsity race at the New England Championships Oct. 7 at Franklin Park…

  • Campus & Community

    Newsmakers

    Folkman to deliver Eva Neer Memorial Lecture M. Judah Folkman, professor at Harvard Medical School and Children’s Hospital Boston, will deliver the annual Eva Neer Memorial Lecture at the M.D.-Ph.D.…

  • 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 Oct. 24 and Dec. 11. Sign-up begins at 2:30…

  • Campus & Community

    Memorial services

    Memorial celebration for Omeljan Pritsak announced A memorial service of the life and career of Professor Omeljan Pritsak will be held Oct. 20 at 2 p.m. in Appleton Chapel, Memorial…

  • Campus & Community

    This month in Harvard history

    Oct. 7, 1944 – The “Harvard Alumni Bulletin” tally of Harvard men known to have served in World War II reaches 23,400. Oct. 21, 1949 – Indian Prime Minister Jawaharlal…

  • Campus & Community

    UHS flu clinics start for those at high risk

    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 musical halftime, a lyrical win

    With a record 800 Allston-Brighton residents turning out for Saturday’s (Oct. 7) Harvard vs. Cornell game, it’s clear that Harvard’s Allston-Brighton Family Football Day has become a great local tradition. For 17 years, Harvard has welcomed its neighbors to enjoy a hearty lunch, impromptu entertainment by the Harvard Band, and a spirited football game -…

  • Campus & Community

    Harvard-Yenching Institute names doctoral fellows

    Initiated in the 1960s, the Harvard-Yenching Institute’s Doctoral Scholars Program (DSP) now consists of two branches – Harvard-DSP and Non-Harvard DSP. Each year the institute invites Harvard departments of the humanities and social sciences to nominate candidates for Harvard-DSP scholarships. Although the candidates do not have to be faculty members or researchers, they must be…

  • Campus & Community

    Applied mathematician Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan wins George Ledlie Prize

    Lakshminarayanan Mahadevan, who finds joy in “discovering the sublime in the mundane,” has been awarded the George Ledlie Prize by the President and Fellows of Harvard College.

  • Campus & Community

    William Robert Hutchison

    William Robert Hutchison, Charles Warren Professor of the History of Religion in America, Emeritus, died on December 16, 2005, at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, in the presence of his immediate family. He was 75.

  • Campus & Community

    The pleasures and perils of pop culture

    In the 1930s, years before man landed on the moon or even orbited the Earth, a very young Frederick I. Ordway III ’49 took an interest in space travel. One day Ordway returned home from school to find a copy of the pulp magazine Amazing Stories left by the family maid on a dining room…

  • Campus & Community

    Tozzer fetes quarter-millionth volume

    Tozzer Library reached a milestone in its 140-year history last month with the acquisition of the quarter-millionth volume to its collection of anthropology, archaeology, and ethnology materials. To mark the occasion, the library is hosting “Codices, Chimpanzees, and Curanderas: From the Field to the Shelf,” an exhibition to celebrate the literature of anthropology and to…

  • Campus & Community

    KSG honors American Indian nations

    Fourteen tribal governments were recently honored and celebrated as examples of excellence by Harvard’s Honoring Contributions in the Governance of American Indian Nations (Honoring Nations) awards program. Based at the Kennedy School of Government, Honoring Nations is administered by the Harvard Project on American Indian Economic Development. The project’s goal is to understand the conditions…

  • Campus & Community

    Presidential speechwriter, former governor to serve as IOP visiting fellows

    Harvard University’s Institute of Politics (IOP), located at the Kennedy School of Government, recently announced that Michael Gerson, former speechwriter and adviser to President George W. Bush, and Christine Todd Whitman, former governor of New Jersey and administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), will serve as IOP Visiting Fellows in October and December,…

  • Campus & Community

    GSAS dean, head of Extension School, German lecturer Phelps dies at 97

    Reginald Henry Phelps ’30, Ph.D. ’47, former associate dean of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences (GSAS), director of University Extension, and lecturer on German, died Sept. 28 in a nursing home in Westfield, Mass. He was 97.

  • Campus & Community

    Football hits it big

    Heading into Saturday’s game (Oct. 7) against the host Harvard football team, Cornell’s Big Red led all of Division I-AA in protecting its quarterback, giving up just 0.3 sacks per game. After Harvard’s defense amassed seven sacks en route to a 33-23 Crimson win – the team’s fourth straight to stay unbeaten on the season…

  • Campus & Community

    In brief

    Orchestra auditions for ‘Der Rosenkavalier’ The Lowell House Opera will commence open orchestra auditions this weekend for its March 2007 production of Richard Strauss’ “Der Rosenkavalier.” Established in 1938, the…

  • Campus & Community

    Preliminary suggestions on general education offered

    The preliminary proposal, released by the task force Oct. 3 for discussion by the FAS, is intended as a series of suggestions for how most effectively to replace the college’s present “core curriculum.”

  • Campus & Community

    Soyinka deplores decline in free expression

    Twenty years after winning the Nobel Prize in literature (the first African to be so honored), Akinwande Oluwole “Wole” Soyinka continues to use his fame as a bully pulpit, and his magical turns of phrase as weapons. For decades, he has employed a polymath’s blend of plays, poems, novels, and memoirs to bring art to…

  • Campus & Community

    Theologian, Anglican Bishop Wright to deliver Belden Noble Lectures

    Anglican Bishop N.T. Wright, an internationally renowned writer and theologian, will deliver this year’s William Belden Noble Lectures – “The Gospel and Our Culture” – on three consecutive evenings, Oct. 23-25, at 8 p.m. in the Memorial Church.

  • Campus & Community

    Police reports

    Following are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department (HUPD) for the week ending Oct. 9. The official log is located at 1033 Massachusetts Ave., sixth floor, and is available online at http://www.hupd.harvard.edu/.

  • Campus & Community

    Faculty Council

    At its third meeting of the year on Oct. 11, the Faculty Council discussed Dean Jeremy R. Knowles’ Letter to the Faculty on FAS finances and was joined by the…

  • Campus & Community

    History and Literature Program celebrates 100 years

    Arthur Schlesinger Jr. did it. Conan O’Brien did it. So did John Lithgow and Stockard Channing.

  • Campus & Community

    Spring in your step helps avert disastrous stumbles

    From graceful ballerinas to clumsy-looking birds, everyone occasionally loses their footing. New Harvard University research suggests that it could literally be the spring, or damper, in your step that helps…

  • Campus & Community

    U.S. lagging in adoption of electronic health records

    With fewer than one in 10 doctors making full use of electronic health records and as few as 5 percent of hospitals using one form of them, the U.S. health…

  • Campus & Community

    Not unusual to forget childhood sexual abuse

    When questioned closely by psychologists from Harvard University about their feelings, victims of childhood sexual abuse revealed some surprising impressions.

  • Health

    Study shows benefits of eating fish greatly outweigh risks

    Many studies have shown the nutritional benefits of eating fish (finfish or shellfish). Fish is high in protein and omega-3 fatty acids. But concerns have been raised in recent years…

  • Campus & Community

    Arthropods invade Harvard Museum of Natural History

    Scorpions, spiders, beetles, and their leggy kin are front and creepy-crawly center in the first new permanent exhibit in 20 years in the biological galleries of the Harvard Museum of Natural History (HMNH).

  • Campus & Community

    Warren Center Fellows investigate ‘Cultural Reverberations’

    Howard Mumford Jones Professor of American Studies Lizabeth Cohen, director of the Charles Warren Center for Studies in American History, has announced the names of seven resident scholars participating in the Warren Center’s 2006-07 workshop, “Cultural Reverberations of Modern War.” Leading the workshop are Nancy Cott, the Jonathan Trumbull Professor of American History, and Carol…