All articles
-
Campus & Community
The Big Picture
Six years after leaving the New York City theater scene for Boston and a new job as a fundraiser, Karen Rives says her joy has returned and the Harvard community is the beneficiary.
-
Campus & Community
Newsmakers
HPT picks Wang for second straight year The Hasty Pudding Theatricals (HPT) has selected Derrick L. Wang ’06 to compose the score for this year’s show: “Terms of Frontierment.” HPT…
-
Campus & Community
The contingencies of friendship
You can’t choose your family, but you can choose your friends. Or can you?
-
Campus & Community
Partisan politics
No official polls have been conducted at the Holyoke Center, but there does seem to be a certain consensus on some of the more important issues of the day.
-
Campus & Community
President holds office hours
President Lawrence H. Summers will hold office hours for students in his Massachusetts Hall office on the following dates:
-
Campus & Community
Police reports
Following are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department for the week ending Oct. 25. The official log is located at 1033 Massachusetts Ave., sixth floor.
-
Campus & Community
Memorial service set for Mack
A memorial service in honor of John E. Mack, professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School since 1972 and founding chairman of the Department of Psychiatry at Cambridge Hospital, will be held at the Memorial Church on Nov. 13 at noon. Mack was struck by a car and killed on Sept. 27 in London. He…
-
Campus & Community
This month in Harvard history
Oct. 15, 1901 – The Harvard Union (now the largest part of Barker Center for the Humanities) is dedicated. Oct. 1, 1908 – With 59 students, the Graduate School of…
-
Campus & Community
Faculty Council meeting on Oct. 27
At its third meeting of the year, the Faculty Council discussed with General Counsel Robert Iuliano, University attorney Ellen Berkman, and Professor John Huchra (astronomy and chair of the Standing Committee on Research Policy) the relevance of national export control policy to university research. The council also considered revisions to the procedures for Memorial Minutes,…
-
Campus & Community
Overworked interns prone to medical errors
Every day, in hospitals all over the country, biology clashes with medicine. Biology demands sleep medicine dictates long hours without it.
-
Campus & Community
Reversing Saddam’s ecocide of Iraqi marshes
Until the early 1990s, the marshes of southern Iraq were a critical environmental lifeline, a source of water and nourishment in the desert, and home to Arab peoples who made their living from marsh fish, plants, and wildlife.
-
Campus & Community
‘It’s alive!!!’
The kids at the Lampoon have given the usually inscrutable facade of their Mt. Auburn Street headquarters a frightful Halloween makeover.
-
Campus & Community
Yannatos starts 41st year conducting HRO
Does playing music promote longevity? Many claim that it does, although the evidence is probably more anecdotal than scientific. Well, here is one more piece of data to add to a bulging albeit inconclusive file: James Yannatos is beginning his 41st year conducting the Harvard-Radcliffe Orchestra (HRO).
-
Campus & Community
Forum panel assails Sudanese government
A panel of human rights activists condemned Sudanese government-sanctioned genocide that has left 1.5 million black Africans in Sudans Darfur region homeless and 70,000 dead.
-
Campus & Community
Auteur in repose
Taiwanese filmmaker Tsai Ming-liang spends a solitary moment before the screening of his new film Goodbye Dragon Inn at the Harvard Film Archive on Tuesday (Oct. 19). Tsais recurring themes are the isolated nature of individual lives, the rituals that are essential for survival, and the restorative power of love. Goodbye Dragon Inn will be…
-
Campus & Community
Zipcar creator looks toward bigger challenges
Robin Chase has already changed the way we drive, but shes not satisfied. Now she wants to change the way we live as well.
-
Campus & Community
Kokkalis graduate student workshop seeks papers
The Kokkalis Program on Southeastern and East-Central Europe, the Kennedy School of Government, and the Southeastern Europe Study Group at the Minda de Gunzburg Center for European Studies will hold the seventh annual Kokkalis Graduate Student Workshop on Feb. 4, 2005.
-
Campus & Community
Childhood cancer survivors at increased risk of breast cancer
Young women who were treated for cancer as children have a greater chance of developing breast cancer if their treatment included chest radiation, if they initially had cancer of the bones, muscles, or connective tissue, or if they have a family history of breast cancer, according to a new study led by researchers at Harvard-affiliated…
-
Campus & Community
KSG conference defines, discusses ‘rogue’ states
Diplomats, academics, and leaders of nongovernmental organizations gathered at the John F. Kennedy School of Government last week for a three-day conference examining the worlds rogue states and how best to handle them.
-
Campus & Community
Panelists decry state of global reproductive health
A Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study conference on womens reproductive health aimed to pierce a global sense of complacency that contributes to hundreds of thousands of women in poor countries dying in childbirth each year.
-
Campus & Community
Ancient fashion show kicks off Sackler Saturdays
This fall the Harvard University Art Museums will return with a fourth year of its successful Sackler Saturdays program. Families with children ages 6 to 11 are invited to explore artworks from ancient cultures and distant lands such as China, Japan, Korea, India, Greece, and Rome. The program, which is free and open to the…
-
Campus & Community
Sports in brief
Winning finish caps 7-1 season for men’s water polo A pair of wins over Iona and Fordham this past Saturday (Oct. 16) in New London, Conn., improved the Harvard men’s…
-
Campus & Community
Football flips Northeastern, 41-14
An undersized Harvard football team effectively dismantled 19th-ranked Northeastern, 41-14, this past Saturday (Oct. 16) to keep its unbeaten season intact. Now 5-0, the host Crimson (2-0 Ivy) held the husky Huskies (3-3) to just two first-half touchdowns – 24 points below their per-game season average – while converting five turnovers into 13 Harvard points.
-
Campus & Community
Brain takes itself on over immediate vs. delayed gratification
You walk into a room and spy a plate of gooey doughnuts dripping with chocolate frosting. But wait: You were saving your sweets allotment for a party later today. If it feels like one part of your brain is battling another, it probably is, according to a newly published study.
-
Campus & Community
Research in brief
Scientists identify major molecular pathway that leads to diabetes Researchers from the Harvard School of Public Health have discovered what they believe is the fundamental mechanism within cells that links…
-
Campus & Community
President Summers announces groundbreaking partnership
Harvard University announced a groundbreaking partnership agreement Thursday (Oct. 14) with Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnología (CONACYT), creating a premiere fellowship program at Harvard for outstanding Ph.D. students from Mexico.
-
Campus & Community
In brief
Peabody, Consulate General of Mexico to fete Day of the Dead The Peabody Museum and the Consulate General of Mexico in Boston will host a celebration of the traditional Mexican…
-
Campus & Community
Hunn Awards given for longtime service
Six alumni/ae were recognized for their outstanding Schools and Scholarships work during an awards ceremony on Oct. 15.
-
Campus & Community
Harvard works to improve foreign student visa system
Concerned about a recent trend that has seen a decline in the number of international students studying in the United States, Harvard University continues to work to smooth the road for those students, who in recent years have faced tougher screenings and longer waits to enter the United States.
-
Campus & Community
Lichtman probes battle of nerves
Theres a war going on inside our bodies, early in life.