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  • Campus & Community

    Harvard Foundation honors minister for his work with African orphans

    Bishop Charles E. Blake, minister of the 20,000-member West Angeles Church of God In Christ in Los Angeles, was awarded the Harvard Foundation Humanitarian Medal on Feb. 27. The ceremony took place before a crowd of students, faculty, and members of the greater Cambridge community at Harvards Memorial Church. The event, sponsored by the Harvard…

  • Campus & Community

    Arthritis and heart disease linked:

    At the end of the largest study of its kind to date, researchers have concluded that rheumatoid arthritis in women may double their risk of heart attacks.

  • Campus & Community

    John Malkovich: The director upstairs:

    You might expect John Malkovich to feel a sense of triumph at having finally brought The Dancer Upstairs to the screen. After all, it took eight years to get the film made, much of that time occupied with finding financial backing.

  • Campus & Community

    Japanese bookbinding, Harvard style:

    In February, a group of Harvard staff and affiliates visited the Far East – that is, the Harvard Neighbors space at the far eastern edge of Harvard Yard – to learn the Japanese art of bookbinding. Yayoi Witzel-Yoshida, who started the Japanese Culture interest group of Harvard Neighbors 10 years ago, and Japanese Culture stalwart…

  • Campus & Community

    Human capital flow project receives $220,000 Weatherhead prize:

    The executive committee of the Weatherhead Center for International Affairs awarded $220,000 this past December to a research team comprising four University faculty members to commence a long-term research project on International Human Capital Flows and their Effects on Developing Countries. This decision marked the centers fourth annual award of a Weatherhead Initiative grant, a…

  • Campus & Community

    Harold Amos, first African-American department chair at HMS, dies at 84:

    Harold Amos, the Maude and Lillian Presley Professor of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics Emeritus at Harvard Medical School (HMS), died Feb. 26. He was 84.

  • Campus & Community

    Lowell House Opera mounts Tchaikovsky’s ‘Eugene Onegin’ :

    At one end of Lowell Houses stately dining room, as servers clear away the last vestiges of the nights meal, students are still arriving, shedding coats and changing shoes and studying musical scores. Beneath a truss hung with theatrical lights that surrounds the rooms awe-inspiring chandelier, they assemble on a plywood platform stage.

  • Campus & Community

    Black Arts Festival panel asks “Whose music is it anyway?”:

    Does jazz belong to Louis Armstrong or Benny Goodman? Does Dr. Dre have more of a claim on hip-hop than Eminem?

  • Campus & Community

    Harvard Black Men’s Forum honors Phylicia A. Rashad:

    The Harvard Black Mens Forum (BMF) will present the 2003 Woman of the Year Award to actress Phylicia A. Rashad, best known for her portrayal of a loving mother of five and high-powered attorney Claire Huxtable on televisions The Cosby Show. The award to Rashad is the highlight of the BMFs Ninth Annual Celebration of…

  • Campus & Community

    Protein implicated in heart failure:

    A faulty protein that interferes with the heart muscles ability to relax is one cause of congestive heart failure, Harvard geneticists found in a discovery that promises more precise treatment of a disease that afflicts 4.7 million Americans.

  • Campus & Community

    Merry hoopsters:

    After chasing the Columbia Lions for 40 minutes this past Saturday night (March 1) at Lavietes Pavilion, an exhausted – and victorious – Harvard womens basketball team calmly took to center court, and proceeded to party like animals. Considering the past 24 hours, who could blame them?

  • Campus & Community

    High folate, vitamin B-6 levels may improve woman’s chances of preventing breast cancer:

    Building on preliminary data, researchers at Harvard-affiliated Brigham and Womens Hospital (BWH) have documented that high folate (vitamin B-9) and vitamin B-6 levels may improve a womans chances of preventing breast cancer. Additionally, researchers observed that adequate folate levels may be particularly important for women who are at higher risk of breast cancer due to…

  • Campus & Community

    Speaking truth with Power:

    Samantha Power has been a bit overwhelmed by the attention she has been getting lately. A typical day for her includes one or more speaking engagements, an interview or two, and an inbox crammed with hundreds of e-mail messages. And all this on top of her teaching and research commitments.

  • Campus & Community

    In brief

    Bok Center offering postdoc fellowship The Derek Bok Center for Teaching and Learning is offering a half-time postdoctoral fellowship for the 2003-04 academic year to support a strong scholar familiar…

  • Campus & Community

    President Summers and Provost Hyman set office hours

    President Lawrence H. Summers and Provost Steven Hyman will hold office hours for students in their Massachusetts Hall offices from 4 to 5 p.m. (unless otherwise noted) 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 March 1. The official log is located at 1033 Massachusetts Ave., sixth floor.

  • Campus & Community

    Faculty Council notice for March 5

    At its 11th meeting of the year, the Faculty Council heard a report from Professor Jennifer Leaning (medicine and public health) on the work of the Committee to Address Sexual Assault at Harvard that she chairs. Present for this discussion were three members of the committee: Professor Everett Mendelsohn (history of science and Master emeritus…

  • Campus & Community

    Mozambique cashew case illustrates hazard of imposed solutions:

    Mozambique was once a world power in the cashew industry, but today it is a bit player, and there is apparently nothing the World Bank can do to change that.

  • Science & Tech

    Molecular cloud has a heartbeat

    Barnard 68, located 300 light-years away in the constellation Ophiuchus, is a typical example of small, dark molecular clouds known as Bok Globules. Such dense, cold clouds of dust and…

  • Campus & Community

    Brigham and Women’s Hospital to launch its first live web surgery program:

    For the first time, surgeons at Harvard-affiliated Brigham and Womens Hospital (BWH) will broadcast cutting-edge surgeries over the Web, in an effort to familiarize doctors with new surgical techniques and to inform the general public about medical advances.

  • Campus & Community

    Memorial Minute:

    At a meeting of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences on December 10, 2002, the following Minute was placed upon the records.

  • Campus & Community

    Taylor to perform at Faith & Life concert:

    Composer and performer Livingston Taylor will return to the Faith & Life Forum on Friday (Feb. 28) at 7:30 p.m. for a free concert. Open to the Harvard community, the performance will also feature special guests from Harvards Festival Choir and will be held at Memorial Church in Harvard Yard.

  • Campus & Community

    Rare watercolors bloom among master drawings:

    An exhibition of more than 100 drawings from the Maida and George Abrams Collection will open at Harvards Fogg Art Museum on March 22, and will remain on view through July 6. The collection includes Dutch and Flemish drawings and is the foremost group of 17th century Dutch drawings in private hands. The exhibition will…

  • Campus & Community

    Black Arts Festival features films:

    The 2003 Black Arts Festival takes place Friday (Feb. 28)-Sunday (March 2). For a complete schedule, go to www.blackartsfestival.net. Events include: Forum: ‘Whose Music Is It Anyway? Thinking About Jazz,…

  • Campus & Community

    Basic research takes root, flowers :

    A center for social science research has been quietly growing on the Harvard campus for five years, fostering interdisciplinary thought and coming up with new ways to conduct social science research on topics such as the causes of war and removing bias from social science surveys.

  • Campus & Community

    Academic freedom vs. national security discussed:

    The free flow of ideas may be a better protection against biological weapons than the secrecy created by classifying academic research, said panelists at the Kennedy School of Government Friday (Feb. 21).

  • Campus & Community

    Harvard vs. Yale:

    Sophomore Asher Hochberg (right) squares off against Yales Aftab Mathur in the Crimsons final dual match of the season on Feb. 19 at the Murr Center Courts. Harvard fell, 5-4, but returned the favor at the College Squash Association Team Championships this past weekend at Princeton, topping the Bulldogs, 5-4, in the consolation round of…

  • Campus & Community

    Ivy spill:

    The Harvard mens basketball team reached a milestone of sorts this past weekend. Unfortunately for the Crimson, it entailed losing three straight games to some of the Ivys finest (and not-so-finest) basketball clubs.

  • Campus & Community

    New drug combination improves survival in rare, aggressive bone cancer of children and young adults:

    Adding two experimental drugs to the standard four-drug chemotherapy regimen has significantly improved survival in patients with nonmetastatic Ewings sarcoma, a highly malignant bone cancer of children and young adults, according to a report published in the Feb. 20 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine.

  • Campus & Community

    Newsmakers

    Locke is elected president of APS Steven E. Locke, associate professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School, and staff psychiatrist at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, will assume the presidency…