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Campus & Community
National Academy of Sciences announces new members
In recognition of their distinguished and continuing achievements in original research, six Harvard professors recently joined 66 other U.S. scientists and engineers to be elected members of the National Academy of Sciences (NAS). The election, held this week during the academys 142nd annual meeting, brings the total number of active members to 2,013.
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Campus & Community
YWCA honors faculty at leadership event
Three Harvard faculty members were recently named among the honorees of YWCA Bostons upcoming womens leadership event. Instructor of Public Health Practice in the Division of Public Health Practice at the Harvard School of Public Health Linda Clayton will be inducted to the Ys prestigious Academy of Women Achievers, while Edwin J. Furshpan, the Robert…
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Campus & Community
Michael Rosen joins FAS as professor of government
Michael Rosen, a scholar of European political philosophy with a consummate command of continental political thought from the 18th century to the present, has been appointed professor of government in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, effective July 1.
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Campus & Community
President holds May office hours
President Lawrence H. Summers will hold office hours for students in his Massachusetts Hall office on the following dates: Thursday, May 11, 4-5 p.m. Sign-up begins one hour earlier unless…
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Campus & Community
Police reports
Following are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department for the week ending April 24. The official log is located at 1033 Massachusetts Ave., sixth floor, and is available online at http://www.hupd.harvard.edu/.
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Campus & Community
Hutchison dies at 75, memorial on Friday
A memorial service for retired Harvard Divinity School (HDS) Professor William Robert Hutchison will be held at the Memorial Church tomorrow (April 28) at 2 p.m. An honorary associate and…
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Campus & Community
Assault reported at Lesley University
At 2 in the morning of April 25, a female student (not affiliated with the University) met an unknown male in the fourth- floor lounge of a Lesley University dormitory. After a brief conversation with the individual, the student reported that the individual sexually assaulted her. The suspect is described as a light-skinned Hispanic male,…
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Campus & Community
Stone, 83, Harvard Corporation member for 27 years
Robert G. Stone Jr. 45, LL.D. 03, a pre-eminent and beloved figure in the Harvard community who served as trusted adviser and friend to three Harvard presidents as well as countless faculty, staff, and students for more than four decades, died on April 18. He was 83. The cause was complications following a stroke, according…
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Campus & Community
Jay O. Light named ninth dean of Harvard Business School
Jay O. Light, an expert in finance and investment management and the Dwight P. Robinson Jr. Professor of Business Administration at Harvard Business School (HBS), will be the Schools next dean, President Lawrence H. Summers announced Monday (April 24).
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Campus & Community
Invasive species harms hardwoods by killing soil fungus
An invasive weed that has spread across much of the United States harms native maples, ashes, and other hardwood trees by releasing chemicals harmful to a soil fungus the trees…
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Campus & Community
Wakeley examines ancestral lines
John Wakeley is devising new ways to trace the evolutionary road taken by humans and the creatures with whom we share planet Earth by creating new models that examine how…
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Campus & Community
Engineering Idol
The winner of this year’s ES100-100hf senior engineering design project course competition aimed straight for the heart by recording an electrical “ballad.” The runners-up (a tie for second), meanwhile, worked…
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Campus & Community
Mad cow protein found to have a sane side
It’s a devastating disease, changing behavior, causing uncontrolled movements, blindness, coma, and, finally, death. And we all have the makings of it in our heads. When it topples cows, it’s…
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Campus & Community
Jay O. Light named ninth dean of Harvard Business School
Jay O. Light, an expert in finance and investment management and the Dwight P. Robinson, Jr., Professor of Business Administration at Harvard Business School (HBS), will be the School’s next Dean.
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Health
Bone-marrow-derived stem cells can reverse genetic kidney disease
The discovery that bone-marrow derived stem cells can regenerate damaged renal cells in an animal model of Alport syndrome provides a potential new strategy for managing this inherited kidney disease…
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Health
Attention shoppers: Researchers find neurons that encode the value of different goods
Researchers at Harvard Medical School report in the April 23, 2006 issue of Nature that they have identified neurons that encode the values that subjects assign to different items. The…
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Science & Tech
Discovery of calcium channel protein illuminates T cell signaling
A rare genetic defect in a family has helped researchers identify a key signaling component in T cells. The newly identified protein, Orai1, may be a piece of a long-…
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Health
Sense of security may be false with tried and true anti-inflammatories
For all the tender joints and headaches they relieve and colon cancer they may prevent, the older nonsteroidal anti- inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) raise another serious health risk. The highly publicized…
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Health
Proteasome recognized as nuclear player on gene-transcription team
One of the most common agents in the cytoplasm of the cell, the proteasome, also plays a widespread and critical role in transcription from inside the cell nucleus. Pam Silver,…
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Campus & Community
Robert Stone, 83, Harvard Corporation member for 27 years
Robert G. Stone, Jr., AB ’45, LLD ’03, a preeminent and beloved figure in the Harvard community who served as trusted adviser and friend to three Harvard Presidents as well as countless faculty, staff, and students for more than four decades, died on Tuesday (April 18).
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Campus & Community
Robert Freed Bales
He was trusted and admired by colleagues in each discipline. They and his students regarded him with deep affection. Freed was one of few faculty members in Social Relations who had moral authority derived from his colleagues’ recognition that he placed the welfare of the department above personal motives.
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Campus & Community
Robert Levin celebrates Mozart’s birthday
Sitting in a swivel chair in his basement office, Robert Levin can barely keep his agile pianists fingers off the telephone. He has just learned that his friend Yehudi Wyner won the 2006 Pulitzer Prize for musical composition with his piano concerto Chiavi in Mano, and he wants to be the first to call the…
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Campus & Community
Coop awards grants for service
Continuing its tradition of contributing to public service projects, the Harvard Coop recently awarded nearly $10,000 in grants to 21 student-led public service organizations for spring and summer 2006. These grants help students to upgrade equipment, design new materials, provide summer services, and launch new projects and special initiatives. The Coop held a grant reception ceremony…
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Campus & Community
Manson, Schuker honored for leadership
JoAnn E. Manson, chief of the Division of Preventive Medicine and co-director of the Connors Center for Womens Health and Gender Biology, Brigham and Womens Hospital, Harvard Medical School, has been named the recipient of the 2006 Harvard College Womens Professional Achievement Award.
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Campus & Community
PBK elects 24 juniors to Harvard chapter
Twenty-four Harvard College juniors were recently elected to the Harvard chapter of Phi Beta Kappa (PBK), the national collegiate honors society.
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Campus & Community
Navajo top court in session at HLS
The Ames Courtroom at Harvard Law School (HLS) is frequently home to mock trials as law students sharpen their skills. On April 12, however, it was the real thing setting up shop at Ames as the Supreme Court of the Navajo Nation heard arguments in an actual case.
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Campus & Community
OfA names annual arts prize winners
The Office for the Arts at Harvard (OfA) and the Council on the Arts at Harvard, a standing committee of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, have announced the winners of the annual undergraduate arts prizes presented in recognition of outstanding accomplishment in the arts for the 2005-06 academic year.
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Campus & Community
Sports in brief
Princetons jumping second half upends womens lacrosse The No. 10 Princeton women’s lacrosse team fired off 20 second-half shots en route to a 14-8 win over the Crimson this past…
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Campus & Community
Hardly madness
Although the Harvard womens basketball team didnt quite make an appearance in the 2006 Final Four tournament (the Crimson, for the record, finished the season 12-15, 8-6 Ivy), the University wasnt entirely unrepresented in the Big Show. In fact, as one of the official hosts and partners for the 25th annual womens Final Four, Harvard…
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Campus & Community
Newsmakers
M.P.H. candidate elected AMA student section chair Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) M.P.H. candidate Benjamin Galper ’02 has recently been elected national chair of the American Medical Association (AMA)…