All articles
-
Campus & Community
Libraries take a stand
Students and faculty logging onto the HOLLIS catalog after winter break found a decrease in the number of periodicals available from Elsevier, one of the worlds largest publishers of scientific journals. According to Sidney Verba, Carl H. Pforzheimer University Professor and director of the University Library, the decision to eliminate these journals was the result…
-
Campus & Community
Newsmakers
HMS researcher wins Crafoord Prize Latham Family Professor of Pathology at Harvard Medical School (HMS) Timothy Springer, a senior investigator at the Center for Blood Research (CBR) Institute for Biomedical…
-
Campus & Community
Strange brew in this Beanpot
In the marquee game of the 52nd annual Beanpot Tournament this past Monday night (Feb. 2) at the FleetCenter, the Harvard mens hockey team quickly found itself embroiled in a comedy of errors. Against the No. 2 Boston College Eagles, the Crimson – appearing a bit rusty after exam period – were outshot, outplayed, and…
-
Campus & Community
Scientists identify antibody that blocks SARS virus infection
An antibody plucked from a library of human antibodies has powerfully blocked infection by the SARS (seere acute respiratory syndrome) irus in laboratory tests, scientists at Harard-affiliated Dana-Farber Cancer Institute report. This discoery could expedite the deelopment of an antibody drug for the preention or early treatment of SARS, which killed nearly 800 people in…
-
Campus & Community
Shorenstein Center names spring fellows
CNNs Tokyo bureau chief, a United Nations information service director, and the editor of The Hindu are among the fellows this semester at the Kennedy Schools Joan Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics and Public Policy.
-
Campus & Community
Erdogan calls for cooperation
Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan called for an Istanbul process Friday (Jan. 30) that would band together the United States, Europe, and the Middle East in an effort to boost democratic government, promote economic growth, and ensure security to the troubled region.
-
Campus & Community
President Summers holds student office hours on Feb. 10
President Lawrence H. Summers will hold office hours for students in his Massachusetts Hall office on the following dates:
-
Campus & Community
Checkered path to a law degree
Colorful tiles line the walls along a ramp to the second floor in Pound Hall at the Law School, brightening the stroll to class.
-
Campus & Community
Police reports
Following are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department for the week ending Jan. 31. The official log is located at 1033 Massachusetts Ave., sixth floor.
-
Campus & Community
This month in Harvard history
Feb. 13, 1847 – The Harvard Corporation votes to establish “an advanced school of instruction in theoretical and practical science and in the other usual branches of academic learning, to…
-
Campus & Community
Hasty Pudding to announce ‘persons’ of year
The Hasty Pudding Woman of the Year festivities will be held on Thursday, Feb. 12. At 2 p.m., the Woman of the Year will lead a parade through the streets of Cambridge. Following the parade, the president of the Hasty Pudding Theatricals and the vice president of the cast will roast this years winner and…
-
Campus & Community
Faculty Council notice Feb. 4
At its seventh meeting of the year (Feb. 4) the Faculty Council reviewed with Dean Willliam C. Kirby a draft of his Annual Letter to the Faculty. Deans Vincent Tompkins (associate dean of the Faculty for Academic Affairs) and Cheryl A. Hoffman-Bray (associate dean for finance in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences) were present…
-
Campus & Community
The curative properties of daffodils
At Harvard, February brings the promise of early delivery on spring, with bright yellow daffodils.
-
Campus & Community
What makes a city thrive?
The population density of Paris is about three times that of Boston. Does this mean Paris is three times as much fun as Boston, or that if Bostons population were compounded by three, it would become another Paris?
-
Health
Cystic fibrosis gene linked to fatty acid defects
Researchers already understood that the defective CFTR gene causes CF, explains senior author Steven D. Freedman, M.D., Ph.D., of the gastroenterology division at BIDMC and associate professor of medicine at…
-
Campus & Community
Short days, long shadows
The winter sun, a sadder light than waning moon, though its warmth is feeble and its everyday life brief, shines with a frigid clarity that creates its own hard beauty. Winter air is rarefied, that is, less dense, and so in the clear sunlight, objects are revealed in all their textured detail – outlines are…
-
Campus & Community
Art museum impresario
Thomas Lentz, the recently appointed director of the Harvard University Art Museums (HUAM), sits at a large oak table in his office in the Fogg Museum. Redecoration is under way, and except for a few chairs, the table is the only piece of furniture in the room, its round, spacious surface piled high with books,…
-
Campus & Community
It’s not just about the money
When it comes to the stubborn persistence of residential segregation in metropolitan Boston, its not just the economy, stupid.
-
Campus & Community
Charles Warren Center announces 2003-04 fellows
Howard Mumford Jones Professor of American Studies Lizabeth Cohen, director of the Charles Warren Center for Studies in American History, has announced the centers visiting scholars for the 2003-04 academic year. Each year, the centers fellows are selected around a theme, which for 2003-04 is The Political Economy of North America.
-
Campus & Community
TAP into a world of learning at Extension School
Whether you want to keep up with the latest trends in your field or learn new skills to make yourself a more valuable Harvard employee, discover the many open enrollment courses or part-time degree and graduate certificate programs offered at the Harvard Extension School. Expand your knowledge by enrolling in just one course or enhance…
-
Campus & Community
Rockin’ chair
Spangler Hall at Harvard University Business School looks like a comfortable, airy place to sit and think in a nice old rocking chair. All youd need is about 80 more degrees Fahrenheit, and life would be ideal.
-
Campus & Community
U.S. awards School of Public Health $20.5 million grant
The federal government has awarded Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) a $20.5 million biodefense grant to study the immune system response to pathogens. The grant, which will span a 4.5-year period, is the largest grant to date to the School for biodefense research. HSPH is also receiving federal funds for leadership training for public…
-
Campus & Community
Joint Center to offer Meyer Dissertation Fellowship
The Joint Center for Housing Studies is offering its John R. Meyer Dissertation Fellowship award for the academic year 2004-05 to Harvard doctoral candidates who are engaged in writing a dissertation on a housing-related topic consistent with the centers research agenda.
-
Campus & Community
Beanpot bound
With bragging rights on the line, the Harvard men and womens hockey teams will compete next week for Best in Boston in the famed Beanpot Tournament. Both Crimson squads will square off against the Boston College Eagles in the first round, with the winner advancing to the championship game a week later to take on…
-
Campus & Community
The Big Picture
When George Dominguez was 13, a mysterious stranger moved into his Jamaica Plain neighborhood and opened a kung fu studio. The strangers name was Yang Jwing Ming, and the young Dominguez was intrigued.
-
Campus & Community
Entrepreneurship Program at HBS wins top award
The Entrepreneurship Program at Harvard Business School (HBS), which has offered courses in entrepreneurship for more than a half century and counts some 65,000 graduates, won the top award for MBA programs nationwide from the United States Association for Small Business and Entrepreneurship (USASBE). Devoted to entrepreneurship education and development, the association cited HBS as…
-
Campus & Community
Shackleton in business school
He was an Antarctic explorer who never got near the South Pole. A mariner whose ship sank miles from its destination in some of the worlds most hostile seas.
-
Campus & Community
In brief
Upcoming info session for Stride Rite grants Graduating seniors are eligible to apply and receive grants up to $25,000 through the Stride Rite Post-Graduate Public Service Grants. Funded programs should…
-
Campus & Community
Newsmakers
Gioia to lead OFA discussion Chairman of the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) Dana Gioia will participate in “Perspectives from the National Endowment for the Arts: An Informal Discussion”…