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  • Campus & Community

    Pluralism Project to offer summer research funds

    Harvards Pluralism Project invites students in the comparative study of religion, anthropology, sociology, history, government, and other academic fields to participate in research on the changing contours of American religious life. Research concerning religious pluralism and American civil society, particularly the mapping of the multireligious dynamics of particular cities and towns new civic instruments of…

  • Campus & Community

    Quirk may explain odd magnetism of Neptune, Uranus

    The abnormal magnetic fields of Uranus and Neptune – whose magnetic poles lie near their equators – may be a side effect of stable planetary cores that hinder convection. Harvard University scientists report in the March 11 issue of the journal Nature that theyve used a computer model, similar to those used in weather forecasting,…

  • Campus & Community

    Shearman memorial April 4

    A memorial service for John K. G. Shearman will be held Sunday, April 4, at 2:30 p.m. in the Faculty Room in University Hall. A reception in the Faculty Room will immediately follow the service. Shearman, who died Aug. 11, 2003, was the Adams University Professor, Emeritus.

  • Campus & Community

    President meets with students, staff

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

  • Campus & Community

    Police reports

    Following are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department for the week ending March 6. The official log is located at 1033 Massachusetts Ave., sixth floor.

  • Campus & Community

    This month in Harvard history

    Ca. March 1947 – Students organize a boycott against a local tavern that refuses to serve blacks. Mitchell Goodman ’45, “Undergraduate” columnist of the “Harvard Alumni Bulletin” (March 29, 1947),…

  • Campus & Community

    Research grants available through Schlesinger Library

    The Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study is now accepting applications for its Carol K. Pforzheimer Student Fellowship grants. Intended to encourage Harvard College students to use the resources of the Schlesinger Library, the fellowship awards $100 to $2,500 to cover research expenses, or as…

  • Campus & Community

    Faculty council notice for March 10

    At its ninth meeting of the year (March 10), the Faculty Council discussed with Professor Thomas Kelly, chair of the Department of Music, a proposed agreement with the New England Conservatory of Music under which undergraduates would be able to complete an A.B. degree at Harvard and a Master of Music degree at the Conservatory…

  • Campus & Community

    Academic turns city into a social experiment

    Antanas Mockus had just resigned from the top job of Colombian National University. A mathematician and philosopher, Mockus looked around for another big challenge and found it: to be in charge of, as he describes it, a 6.5 million person classroom.

  • Campus & Community

    Water makes biological splash on Mars

    Finding new signs of water on Mars was not unlike finding a needle in a haystack. Now scientific explorers and their robot helpers face a trickier task, looking for life, a needle they are not even sure is there.

  • Campus & Community

    Newsmakers

    Harvard Foundation names Scientist of the Year The Harvard Foundation has honored noted mathematician Jonathan David Farley ’91 as its Distinguished Scientist of the Year. A visiting associate professor of…

  • Campus & Community

    Portrait of the artist as molecule

    During the early 1980s, artist Gary Schneider, at a creative impasse in his own work and faced with the necessity of earning a living, decided to capitalize on his darkroom skills and set himself up in business as a printer of the work of other photographers.

  • Campus & Community

    The world on her strings

    To say that Janet Sung plays the violin well is like noting that Baryshnikov is graceful or that Ernest Hemingway knew English. Sung 95 has appeared as a soloist with the National Symphonic Orchestra of Bashkortostan in Russia and Pusan Philharmonic in South Korea, to name a few. Shes given recitals across the globe, from…

  • Campus & Community

    When the fog clears

    Learn from your mistakes. Pass the lessons on to those who may face similar problems in the future. And dont be afraid to challenge authority.

  • Campus & Community

    MAC renovations to begin in June

    The Harvard Department of Athletics has announced plans to expand and improve fitness facilities at the Malkin Athletic Center (MAC). The improvements will significantly increase the space available for both exercise and weight training.

  • Campus & Community

    Simmons, Harvard team up to help devastated Iraqi libraries

    Responding to the devastating effects of war on Iraqi libraries, the Harvard University Library (HUL) system and Simmons Graduate School of Library and Information Science (GSLIS) are launching a joint program to provide training for Iraqi librarians and archivists.

  • Campus & Community

    Sports briefs

    Jantzen pins third EIWA title, on to NCAA’s Senior wrestler Jesse Jantzen became the first Harvard wrestler in history to win three-straight EIWA titles by defeating Brown’s David Dies, 5-2,…

  • Campus & Community

    Corriero’s clutch play is timeless

    Team player Nicole Corriero 05 entered the sports worlds exclusive last-second-hero club this past Saturday (March 6) at the Bright Hockey Center. Deadlocked at 0-0 against Yale in the final period, the junior left winger somehow found the back of the net with just seven seconds remaining to give the Harvard womens hockey team an…

  • Campus & Community

    The Big Picture

    After six albums and years touring the country on the folk circuit, Russell Wolffs music means a lot to him. But a serious illness over a year ago gave Wolff new perspective.

  • Campus & Community

    Pablo Neruda’s songs of love and despair

    In honor of the centennial of the birth of poet Pablo Neruda, the George Edward Woodberry Poetry Room will host The Poems of Pablo Neruda on March 17.

  • Campus & Community

    On the rocks

    Harvard and Radcliffe crew coaches perform an annual rite of spring, breaking up the ice on the Charles to allow their teams to practice.

  • Campus & Community

    Administrative/Professional Prize nominations sought

    The Faculty of Arts and Sciences (FAS) Administrative/Professional Prize is awarded in even-numbered years to four members of the FAS administrative or professional staff who have made extraordinary contributions above and beyond the immediate requirements of their positions. The prize consists of $8,000 and one months paid leave from the University, both of which must…

  • Campus & Community

    Hyde collection finds home at Harvard

    Samuel Johnson, creator of “A dictionary of the English language,” is one of the most quoted of English writers, second only to Shakespeare; and the latter part of the 18th century is often called, simply, the Age of Johnson.

  • Campus & Community

    Tigers kick past Crimson

    A sea of parents, family, and friends brought a storm of support to Blodgett Pool last week for the 2004 Ivy League Womens Swimming and Diving Championships. Brandishing pom-poms and banners, and dressed in their team-color best, they came by plane, car, and the Red Line to cheer on their favorite student-athletes in the big…

  • Campus & Community

    Sports briefs

    Men’s squash falls in nationals, 5-4 The No. 1 Trinity men’s squash team came back to defeat Harvard, 5-4, in the finals of the College Squash Association’s National Team Tournament…

  • Campus & Community

    Newsmakers

    Rands elected to American Academy of Arts & Letters The American Academy of Arts and Letters has elected Walter Bigelow Rosen Professor of Music Bernard Rands as a new member.…

  • Campus & Community

    Provocative, alternative look at ‘Arab liberals’

    The Middle East is not Eastern Europe.

  • Campus & Community

    Getting into the rhythm

    Taking their inspiration from South African laborers during apartheid, the Gumboots Dance Troupe, sponsored by the Harvard African Students Association, performs its subversive moves at Sanders Theatre on Feb. 28 at the 19th Annual Cultural Rhythms. Actor, comedian George Lopez (left) was 2004 Artist of the Year. (Staff photos Gail Oskin/Harvard News Office)

  • Campus & Community

    Herbert Benson counsels busy students:

    Stressed out? Exhausted? Scared? Confused? Eating poorly?

  • Campus & Community

    Student Mental Health Task Force releases interim report

    The Student Mental Health Task Force, convened in December 2003 by Harvard University Provost Steven Hyman and Dean of Harvard College Benedict Gross, has released an interim report that recommends the administrative integration of the Bureau of Study Counsel (BSC) and University Health Services (UHS) Mental Health Service. The recommendations – which include creating a…