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  • Campus & Community

    Richard Neustadt remembered as guiding force at KSG

    Richard E. Neustadt, Douglas Dillon Professor of Government Emeritus at Harvards Kennedy School of Government and eminent presidential scholar and former adviser to three U.S. presidents, is being remembered fondly by former colleagues as a guiding force in Kennedy School history. Neustadt passed away in England on Friday (Oct. 31) at age 84.

  • Campus & Community

    Miller named chair of ophthalmology at HMS

    Professor of Ophthalmology Joan W. Miller, an internationally recognized expert in the field of macular degeneration, was recently named chief of ophthalmology at the Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmary (MEEI) and chair of ophthalmology at Harvard Medical School (HMS).

  • Campus & Community

    Gephardt throws strikes at ‘Hardball’

    This is the fourth in a series of interviews with Democractic presidential candidates.

  • Campus & Community

    Panel probes power, personality of LBJ

    The complex personality and power of President Lyndon Baines Johnson and his legacy to todays political and media landscape were the topics of the Theodore H. White Seminar Wednesday morning (Oct. 29) at the Kennedy School of Government (KSG). Pulitzer Prize-winning biographer of Johnson, Robert Caro, joined a panel of prominent media figures for a…

  • Campus & Community

    Richardson Fellowships go to grads committed to public service

    Rachelle Gould 03, an environmental science concentrator working for The Nature Conservancy in Washington, D.C., and Chile, and Krishnan Subrahmanian 03, a social studies concentrator developing programs for children with HIV/AIDS in South Africa, are this years recipients of the Elliot and Anne Richardson Fellowships in Public Service. The two recent graduates received the second…

  • Campus & Community

    Kuwait Program accepting grant proposals until Dec. 1

    The Kennedy School of Government (KSG) has announced the fifth funding cycle for the Kuwait Program Research Fund. With support from the Kuwait Foundation for the Advancement of Science, a KSG faculty committee will consider applications for small one-year grants (up to $30,000) to support advanced research by Harvard University faculty members on issues of…

  • Campus & Community

    Civil War historian, beloved professor, William Gienapp, at 59

    William E. Gienapp, Harvard College Professor, professor of history, and a prominent authority on the Civil War, died Oct. 29 at Emerson Hospital in Concord, Mass., of complications related to cancer. He was 59. Passionate about baseball, Gienapp was known as a popular, engaging teacher whose lectures regularly packed halls with undergraduates.

  • Campus & Community

    Lapse from the past

    For all the musing over the stadiums centennial this season, the outcome of Saturdays game against Dartmouth proved to be regrettably reminiscent. After all, it was Nov. 14, 1903, when the then Dartmouth Indians blanked the Crimson, 11-0, to break in the new stadium. And though the Crimson put up a good fight Nov. 1,…

  • Campus & Community

    Needling Harvard community about flu shots

    University Health Services (UHS) will be providing free flu vaccines to members of the Harvard community beginning this month. The walk-in clinics are being held at the following locations:

  • Campus & Community

    The Big Picture

    Nature draws her, the rocks and the water and the trees the constant change that cycles around until its familiar again and comfortable.

  • Campus & Community

    In brief

    IOP, Kennedy Library Foundation launch new award The John F. Kennedy Library Foundation and the Institute of Politics (IOP) have announced the creation of the John F. Kennedy New Frontier…

  • Campus & Community

    Newsmakers

    Order of Academic Palms honors Nye Kennedy School Dean Joseph S. Nye Jr. received the insignia of Chevalier in the Order of Academic Palms by M. Jean-David Levitte, French ambassador…

  • Campus & Community

    Radcliffe Fellow explores early female film pioneers

    When Jane Gaines was studying film history in graduate school, tracking the achievements of the industrys early female pioneers was easy. There were exactly four: two French, Alice Guy-Blache and Germaine Dulac, and Americans Dorothy Arzner and Lois Weber. By the 1990s, however, scholars had unearthed, from deep in film archives around the world, evidence…

  • Campus & Community

    Community Gifts campaign kicks off giving season

    Whether the impending holidays bring joyful anticipation or stressed-out dread, Harvard employees can get a jump-start on the giving season with the Universitys 2003-04 Community Gifts Through Harvard Campaign, which launched this week and runs through November. The campaign, with a goal this year of $1 million, provides a low-stress, high-impact vehicle for improving the…

  • Campus & Community

    Mark your calendar for meeting with president

    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 Nov. 1. The official log is located at 1033 Massachusetts Ave., sixth floor.

  • Campus & Community

    This month in Harvard history

    Nov. 2, 1657 – By request of the Board of Overseers, the Great and General Court approves an Appendix to the Charter of 1650 clarifying the division of power between…

  • Campus & Community

    4/15/47: Robinson’s day

    Gerald L. Early, Merle Kling Professor of Modern Letters at Washington University in St. Louis, delivers the first of The Alain LeRoy Locke Lectures inside the Barker Center. In this talk, Early concentrated on Jackie Robinson, a staunch civil rights activist, successful businessman, and the first African American to play in major league baseball. Early,…

  • Campus & Community

    Twilight zone twilight

    Whether the result of a solar flare, the nearness of Halloween, or the lustrous alchemy of cloud, setting sun, and October light, the coming of dusk on Oct. 29 turned Harvard Square into a luminous spectacle.

  • Campus & Community

    A role for clay in formation of the first cells

    Harvard researchers demonstrated how the first living cells may have formed in a series of experiments that indicate that clay can be an important catalyst for life.

  • Campus & Community

    Is your heart in the right place?

    Whether your heart winds up in the right place may be determined as early as the first hour of your life in the womb.

  • Health

    Did life originally spring from clay?

    While the research is a far cry from proving that humans sprang from clay, as some creation myths assert, it does provide a possible mechanism for explaining how life initially…

  • Health

    Enzyme responsible for protein’s ‘Jekyll-and-Hyde’ personality

    Normally, a protein regulates when and how body parts develop, but when mutated, it triggers a rare, often-lethal infant leukemia called mixed lineage leukemia. The newly identified protease enzyme, Taspase1,…

  • Science & Tech

    Studies identify protein’s role in immune response

    Tim-3 (T cell immunoglobulin domain, mucin domain) proteins are found on the surface of TH1-helper type T cells, which when activated become the body’s first line of defense against foreign…

  • Campus & Community

    For service beyond the call

    The Harvard University Alumni Association presented six awards this year to some of its most loyal longtime volunteers who work all over the world administering alumni services. The award is named in honor of Hiram S. Hunn 21 who did schools committee work for 55 years in Iowa and Vermont. At the Agassiz Theatre event,…

  • Campus & Community

    Sharpton plays ‘Hardball’ with Matthews

    This is the third in a series of interviews with Democratic presidential candidates.

  • Campus & Community

    Getting their kicks

    Harvard Colleges Hasty Pudding Theatricals (HPT) donated $11,000 of its profits from its 155th production, Its A Wonderful Afterlife, to help launch the Hasty Pudding Theatricals Fund for Cultural Enrichment in Cambridge Public Schools. The fund will provide

  • Campus & Community

    Kuwait Program accepting grant proposals

    The Kennedy School of Government (KSG) has announced the fifth funding cycle for the Kuwait Program Research Fund. With support from the Kuwait Foundation for the Advancement of Science, a KSG faculty committee will consider applications for small one-year grants (up to $30,000) to support advanced research by Harvard University faculty members on issues of…

  • Campus & Community

    Rachel Pollock

    This is my fourth season on staff as craft artisan at the ART [American Repertory Theatre]. There are three areas of costuming that are my responsibility: craftwork, fabric painting/dyeing, and distressing.

  • 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.