All articles


  • Campus & Community

    Committee on Human Rights announces fellows

    The Harvard University Committee on Human Rights Studies has announced the recipients of the 2005-06 Third Millennium Fellowships. The program, launched by the Third Millennium Foundation in 2004, enables students from the University to bring human rights theory and practice together, to make a valuable contribution to human rights, to gain firsthand experience abroad in…

  • Campus & Community

    In brief

    Lagemann presentation to accompany PDK ceremony Harvard Graduate School of Education Dean Ellen Condliffe Lagemann will speak to members of Harvard’s Phi Delta Kappa (PDK) chapter on May 19 at…

  • Campus & Community

    Newsmakers

    Merage Fellows announced Harvard students Svetlana Meyerzon ’05 and Onyi Offor ’05 recently joined 12 other college seniors nationwide to be named 2005 American Dream Fellows by the Merage Foundation.…

  • Campus & Community

    Book collecting winners are announced

    Harvard students Loren Bienvenu 07 and Brian Distelberg 05 have both been awarded first prize in this years Visiting Committee Prize for Undergraduate Book Collecting. Finding overwhelming merit in both Bienvenus entry, Shining Through the Ashes: A Collection of Beat Literature, and Distelbergs entry, An Interesting Trio of Writers: Books By and About Edward Everett…

  • Campus & Community

    Michael Hopkins, algebraic topologist

    Michael J. Hopkins, whose work linking algebraic topology to other branches of mathematics and physics has earned him a reputation as the worlds pre-eminent algebraic topologist, has been appointed professor of mathematics in Harvard Universitys Faculty of Arts and Sciences, effective July 1.

  • Campus & Community

    Police reports

    Following are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department (HUPD) for the week ending Saturday (April 25). The official log is located at 1033 Massachusetts Ave., sixth floor.

  • Campus & Community

    Memorial services set for Mayr, Skiotis

    Mayr memorial service on April 29 A memorial service for renowned Harvard evolutionary biologist Ernst Mayr, the Alexander Agassiz Professor of Zoology Emeritus, will be held Friday (April 29) at…

  • Campus & Community

    Lawn work

    Law School student Jonathan Bashford works on his laptop on the lawn outside the Harvard Museum of Natural History.

  • Campus & Community

    This month in Harvard history

    April 17, 1953 – West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer visits Harvard. April 1954 – Inspired by the success of a 1953 loan exhibition of French drawings, the Fogg Museum presents…

  • Campus & Community

    ‘Odd couple’ mentors in perfect partnership

    Harvard Extension School students 1st Lt. Kendrick Harris, deputy chief of advanced systems and technology at Hanscom Air Force Base, and Grace Greenwich, who commutes to Cambridge from New York, where she is associate director of alumni relations at New York University, initially seem like an odd pairing. He, in worn jeans and an unconstructed…

  • Campus & Community

    Harvard has nine Schweitzer fellows

    Nine students from Harvard Medical School (HMS) and Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) have been selected as 2005-06 Boston Schweitzer Fellows. Honoring the legacy of Dr. Albert Schweitzer by committing to a year of service with a community agency, each Schweitzer Fellow will devote more than 200 hours of service to local communities lacking…

  • Campus & Community

    ‘Acting on Faith’ explores lives of three women

    A standing-room-only crowd packed Fong Auditorium in Boylston Hall on Tuesday (April 26) for the premiere of Acting on Faith: Women and New Religious Activism in America, a documentary film produced by Rachel Antell M.T.S. 92, a Pluralism Project research affiliate. Diana L. Eck, director of the Pluralism Project and professor of comparative religion and…

  • Campus & Community

    The Big Picture

    The Gaesatae were a tribe of ancient Celtic warriors who went into battle stark naked, the better to impress their enemies with their fearlessness. In order to appear even more terrifying many of them spiked their hair, stiffening it with lime. Would the lime have made their hair white? Dan Meagher wanted to know. After…

  • Campus & Community

    Brustein to read from ‘Letters to a Young Actor’

    The American Repertory Theatre (A.R.T.) will welcome author, theater critic, writer, teacher, and its founding director, Robert Brustein, for an evening of readings from his new book, “Letters to a…

  • Campus & Community

    President’s office hours set for May 11

    President Lawrence H. Summers will hold office hours for students in his Massachusetts Hall office on the following dates:

  • Campus & Community

    Faculty Council for April 27

    At its 14th meeting of the year on April 27, the Faculty Council discussed proposed changes to the Handbook for Students and the Allston Burr Senior Tutorships.

  • Campus & Community

    ‘Moving toward’ global warming solution

    Earth Day at Harvard offered a hopeful note this year, as speakers praised the University’s efforts toward sustainability, saying they reflect similar grassroots efforts around the country that are forming…

  • Campus & Community

    Scientists create high-speed nanowire circuits

    Chemists and engineers at Harvard University have made robust circuits from minuscule nanowires that align themselves on a chip of glass during low-temperature fabrication, creating rudimentary electronic devices that offer…

  • Campus & Community

    Harvard examining geospatial analysis technology programs

    n Moshi, Tanzania, hard-hit by AIDS, researchers are using detailed aerial photographs and global positioning system receivers to locate study subjects in a maze of houses without addresses and streets…

  • Campus & Community

    Lazy eyes aid artists, biologist says

    Margaret Livingstone found herself in a small room at the Louvre museum in Paris with four self-portraits by Rembrandt. She noticed something strange. The eyes of the great 17th century…

  • Science & Tech

    Student makes cableless cable

    Matthew DePetro ’05 earned top honors for his senior design project, “Wireless Cable Television.” The first-prize entry “untethers” standard cable TV and even eliminates the need for a wall outlet.…

  • Health

    Antibiotics do not prevent heart attacks; New findings from the PROVE IT-TIMI 22 clinical trial

    Christopher P. Cannon, M.D., of Brigham and Women’s Hospital and associate professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, noted that the fact that many patients do not exhibit identifiable risk…

  • Science & Tech

    Simulations show growth of black holes

    Using a new computer model of galaxy formation, researchers have shown that growing black holes release a blast of energy that fundamentally regulates galaxy evolution and black hole growth itself.…

  • Health

    Routine HIV screening recommended for most

    Researchers at Harvard, Massachusetts General Hospital, and Yale University have shown that routine screening for HIV, the virus that causes AIDS, could increase survival, prevent transmission of the disease, and…

  • Science & Tech

    E.O. Wilson, “Ant Man”

    E. O. Wilson reflects on insect societies, human society, and the importance of biodiversity.

  • Campus & Community

    Pointe, counterpointe

    Hypnotic, energetic, vital, moving, amusing, and gravity-defying are just a few of the adjectives that need to precede the premier word describing a recent University dance premiere – original. Harvard Dance Programs Spring 2005 Dancers Viewpointe V made the stage look like a trampoline last Thursday (April 14) as works of talented local and national…

  • Campus & Community

    Hamashita to present Reischauer Lectures

    Established in 1986, the annual Reischauer Lecture series is sponsored this year by the Fairbank Center for East Asian Research and the Reischauer Institute of Japanese Studies. Renowned international scholar Takeshi Hamashita will present the two remaining lectures.

  • Campus & Community

    Japanologist brings broad perspective

    Medical historian and Japanologist Shigehisa Kuriyama, who has brought an unusually broad perspective to the study of world medical history, has been appointed Reischauer Institute Professor of Cultural History in Harvard Universitys Faculty of Arts and Sciences, effective July 1.

  • Campus & Community

    Are you being served?

    Alexis Martire 05 plays number three doubles against Boston College on April 19 at home. The Crimson, ranked 19th in the nation, downed the Eagles, 6-1, to capture their sixth consecutive victory.

  • Campus & Community

    Sports in brief

    Golf struggles at Ivy champs Harvard’s men’s and women’s golf teams finished eighth and sixth, respectively, in Ivy League championship action this past weekend (April 16-17). The men turned in…