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  • Campus & Community

    Crimson rack Crusaders, 3-0

    Sophomore goalkeeper Ryan Johnson registered a career-high 10 saves on Tuesday afternoon (Oct. 14) to preserve a 3-0 shutout against visiting Holy Cross (1-8-1). With the win, Johnson – ranked second in the Ivy League in the number of goals allowed per game (.84) – earns his third shutout of the season. Still unbeaten at…

  • Campus & Community

    The Big Picture

    Im a spiritual person, a Christian, but Im not what you would call orthodox. Im a preachers kid. My dad was the minister of a small, evangelical church on the south side of Atlanta. I learned how to pray as a kid, but I found that it didnt work for me. What does work for…

  • Campus & Community

    HBS students named Toigo Foundation Fellows

    The Robert Toigo Foundation, a leading organization supporting the advancement of exceptional minority business degree students and alumni within the finance industry, recently announced the selection of 13 Harvard Business School (HBS) students as Toigo Fellows. The new fellows include Schelton Assoumou, Tchintcia Barros, Eugene Chiu, Jason Davis, Jaimee Fomer, Christopher Johnson, Leroy Kennedy, Kristal…

  • Campus & Community

    Puddle piercing

    A puddle left by an overnight rainstorm is pierced by the image of the Memorial Church steeple appearing behind Sever Hall.

  • Campus & Community

    Newsmaker

    Frosch receives NAE award The National Academy of Engineering (NAE) recently presented senior research fellow at the Kennedy School of Government Robert Frosch with the Arthur M. Bueche Award. Frosch…

  • Campus & Community

    In brief

    K through 12 tutors needed Cambridge School Volunteers Inc. (CSV) – a private, nonprofit organization that recruits, trains, and places volunteers in Cambridge Public Schools – is recruiting people of…

  • Campus & Community

    Fund established in memory of HMS grad student

    Brina Sheeman Shackelford, a fifth-year graduate student at the Medical School, died last weekend in a car accident in New Hampshire. Shackelford was admired by those who knew her as a truly bright and compassionate friend and colleague. The Shackelford family would like to honor her commitment to graduate work in the sciences by requesting…

  • Campus & Community

    Summers to hold office hours on Nov. 3

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

  • Campus & Community

    This month in Harvard history

    Oct. 17, 1640 – The Great and General Court grants Harvard the revenues of the Boston-Charlestown ferry, which plies the shortest route between Boston and Charlestown, Cambridge, Watertown, Medford, and…

  • Campus & Community

    For many, prenups seem to predict doom

    In the event of divorce – statistically, the reality for nearly half the marriages in America – a prenuptial agreement has the potential to save the divorcing couple anguish, arguments, and thousands of dollars. It may represent an exit agreement far closer to their wishes than the court-ordered divorce. A good prenuptial agreement can even…

  • Campus & Community

    Blocking the road to extinction

    A widely cited estimate is that at current rates of deforestation, orangutans will be extinct in the wild in 20 years. But Assistant Professor of Anthropology Cheryl Knott, who heads…

  • Campus & Community

    Worth more than the paper they’re written on

    According to Beth Simmons, a professor of government at Harvard, governments care what others think of them. They want to be admired and can be publicly embarrassed, just like like…

  • Campus & Community

    Breast cancers tied to brain survival

    A gene produces a protein that evidently protects cancer cells in the same way it shields brain cells from damage caused by diseases like Alzheimer’s and strokes. “The same substance…

  • Health

    Innate signal sparks homing of T cells

    The results of three studies published together in the Aug. 31, 2003 online edition of Nature Immunology help explain the uncanny ability of T cells to home to problem areas…

  • Health

    Compound traces brain plaques in real time

    Alzheimer’s disease is notoriously difficult to diagnose. Though sophisticated functional and cognitive tests can help, they often fail to distinguish between Alzheimer’s and other non-amyloid-based dementias, particularly frontotemporal dementia. The…

  • Campus & Community

    Ducks, sheep, and chickens, oh my…

    Science let its hair down in Harvards Sanders Theatre Thursday night (Oct. 2), laughing at its own foibles as it skewered dubious but real scientific achievements through the awarding of the annual Ig Nobel Prizes.

  • Campus & Community

    Harvard wins $10M NIH Center of Excellence grant

    Harvard University has been awarded a $10 million Center of Excellence grant to establish the Harvard Center for Chemical Methodologies and Library Development (HCMLD). The National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS) of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) awarded the grant.

  • Campus & Community

    Harvard Foundation honors two WWII vets

    The Harvard Foundation for Intercultural and Race Relations will host two veterans of World War II, one black and one white, as honorary guests on Oct. 16. The remarkable story of these two men – both former U.S. Army Air-Corps pilots – has recently come to light through reports from NBC News and the History…

  • Campus & Community

    The Big Picture

    Wine is in Paul Malagrifas blood. His grandfather, an Italian immigrant, made wine in his East Boston basement. I always said that I was going to carry on the family tradition, says Malagrifa, who has been playing with wine for nearly two decades.

  • Campus & Community

    Portrait of a scholar

    Harvard Law School Dean Elena Kagan (above right) and Byrne Professor of Administrative Law Emeritus Clark Byse unveiled a portrait of Archibald Cox, Carl M. Loeb University Professor Emeritus and the first Watergate special prosecutor, Wednesday (Oct. 8). In addition to his long and celebrated career as a teacher and scholar, Archibald Cox was able…

  • Campus & Community

    This month in Harvard history

    Oct. 7, 1642 – By order of the Great and General Court, a reorganized Board of Overseers becomes a permanent part of College governance. Oct. 14, 1763 – At the…

  • Campus & Community

    The high road

    A pedestrian waits for the traffic to abate before crossing Massachusetts Avenue from the Holyoke Center to the Yard.

  • Campus & Community

    Beatrice Blyth Whiting, anthropologist, dies at 89

    Beatrice Blyth Whiting, a leading anthropologist of childhood and professor emerita of education at the Harvard Graduate School of Education, died on Sept. 29 of pneumonia at Mt. Auburn Hospital in Cambridge. She was 89.

  • Campus & Community

    HBS assumes mantle of renewable power pioneer

    A new solar power installation on top of Harvard Business Schools Shad Hall has made the School a renewable energy pioneer and, supporters said, provide a concrete case study of the affordability of clean solar energy.

  • Campus & Community

    Graham charts course for oldest grad school

    The secular and the divine at Harvard, once so intertwined as to be indistinguishable, have drifted apart throughout the Universitys history. It was, in part, concern for things divine that motivated Harvards founders, who anticipated the inevitable demise of the colonys English-educated clergy and dread[ed] to leave an illiterate ministry to the churches.

  • Campus & Community

    Allston-Brighton Family Football Day scores with fans

    Nearly 400 Allston-Brighton residents and their families joined the Harvard Crimson at the 14th annual Allston-Brighton Family Football Day on Saturday (Oct. 4). Sponsored by the Office of Government Affairs and the Department of Athetics, the event offers Allston-Brighton football fans, young and old, complementary tickets and lunch at a football game each season.

  • Campus & Community

    Cross-town showdown highlights D

    With two such highly explosive football teams, Saturdays (Oct. 4) match-up between Harvard and Northeastern had all the makings of a scoring free-for-all. After all, the cross-town showdown featured two of the nations most offensively potent teams in Division IAA football (lest you forget, the Huskies racked up 72 points in their season opener, while…

  • Campus & Community

    Radcliffe marks Schlesinger’s 60th with conference

    Gender and race shared the stage at a Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study conference marking the 60th anniversary of the Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America Friday (Oct. 2), a nod to the Schlesingers considerable holdings of African-American womens papers. The daylong event, Gender, Race, and Rights in African…

  • Campus & Community

    HFA hosts ‘Mystic River’ homecoming

    Hollywood came to Cambridge Monday night (Oct. 6), as the area premiere of the Boston-bred film Mystic River festooned Sanders Theatre with more glitz than is customary on a weeknight in Harvard Square. But at the event, a benefit for the venerable Harvard Film Archive (HFA) on its 25th anniversary, Boston and Cambridge outshone the…

  • Campus & Community

    John Dunlop, esteemed scholar, dies at 89

    John Dunlop, a distinguished Harvard scholar and administrator who played significant roles as a labor negotiator and government official, died Thursday morning (Oct. 2) at Brigham and Womens Hospital. He was 89.