All articles


  • Campus & Community

    Study: Use of acetaminophen, NSAIDs, linked to hypertension

    Researchers at Brigham and Womens Hospital (BWH) and the School of Public Health (SPH) have shown that regular, frequent consumption of painkillers containing acetaminophen and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), like ibuprofen, increased the risk of hypertension in a large group of women studied.

  • Campus & Community

    Stress adds years to life!:

    When Nietzsche said, “What does not destroy me makes me stronger,” he might have been speaking about bonsai trees.

  • Campus & Community

    Brian Farrell meets the beetles

    Brian D. Farrell is a man with many props. He bounds around his sunny corner office at the Museum of Comparative Zoology showing off his finds: a pile of 60-year-old lantern slides of Cuba, an ancient projector, the dog-eared 1938 field journal of P.J. Darlington Jr., a well-known zoogeographer and one of Farrells predecessors at…

  • Campus & Community

    Money, menopause:

    Women who have lived through economic hardship as a child or adult are likely to start perimenopause (the period leading up to menopause) earlier than affluent women, suggests research in the November issue of the Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health.

  • Campus & Community

    “We’ve been through worse…”:

    The idea that history has something valuable and useful to teach us has been seriously questioned by academic historians in recent years, and a new and often bewildering set of theories justifying the historical enterprise has been proposed in its stead.

  • Campus & Community

    Menino, Miss America help SPH mark gun violence ‘Day of Concern’:

    Boston Mayor Thomas Menino and reigning Miss America Erika Harold joined Harvard School of Public Health faculty and students from Bostons Mission Hill School to mark a National Day of Concern about youth gun violence Thursday (Oct. 24).

  • Campus & Community

    Starship memories:

    Susan Clancys research has taken her into alien territory.

  • Campus & Community

    Ending war, conflict is the work of Belfer’s WPF Fellows:

    The Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs (BCSIA) is the hub of the Kennedy School of Governments (KSGs) research, teaching, and training in international security affairs, environmental and resource issues, science and technology policy, and intrastate conflict prevention and resolution studies.

  • Campus & Community

    In brief

    FAS curriculum crux of upcoming symposia As part of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences curricular review, the Office of the Dean for Undergraduate Education will be sponsoring two public…

  • Campus & Community

    Deciding set slips Martire to second in ITA regionals:

    A host of athletes from the East Coast wrapped up play at the Omni Hotels Intercollegiate Tennis Associations Eastern Region Tournament this past Tuesday (Oct. 29) at the Murr Tennis Center. The four-day tournament is the qualifying event for the foremost indoor tournament in the nation – the National Indoor Championships – to be held…

  • Campus & Community

    Rose to the occasion (Fitzpatrick, too):

    With two highly capable quarterbacks in the Crimson mix, Harvard football coach Tim Murphy has been in a bit of a bind over the past few Saturdays. But given the big playmaking going on between senior captain Neil Rose and sophomore marvel Ryan Fitzpatrick, the coachs conundrum has become Harvards blessing. And in a somewhat…

  • Campus & Community

    Harvard’s Afterschool Bridging Program grants connect children’s lives:

    Tim Garvin, vice president and executive director of the Central Branch of the YMCA of Greater Boston, describes a childs life as a triangle. The child is in the middle of the triangle, Garvin says, surrounded and supported by the childs school, family, and larger community.

  • Campus & Community

    Radcliffe’s “Women, Money, and Power” conference addresses harsh realities of female entrepreneurship:

    To complement its museum exhibit Enterprising Women: 250 Years of American Business, the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study gathered scholars from a variety of disciplines to explore the intellectual, political, and cultural context of Women, Money, and Power Oct. 24 and 25.

  • Campus & Community

    Assault Prevention Services coordinator named:

    Susan B. Marine has been named Harvard Colleges first coordinator of Sexual Assault Prevention Services, a position jointly created by the College and the Office of the Provost. Marine, who brings impressive experience from the private and public sectors, will oversee all student education related to sexual assault, its prevention, and resources for victims of…

  • Campus & Community

    Committee to ensure access to education, prevention, and support

    The Committee to Address Sexual Assault at Harvard (CASAH) was created in May 2002, under the joint auspices of Harvard College and the Office of the Provost, to help ensure that students have access to the most effective range of educational programming, preventive measures, and support services related to sexual violence on campus. This 11-member…

  • Campus & Community

    Community gathering

    Prior to the recent football game against Northeastern, President Lawrence H. Summers joined more than 500 Allston-Brighton residents for a pre-game lunch. Summers (center) is pictured with several local residents, including Barbara and Gus OBrien (far left), Barbara Pecci (next to Summers), John Bruno, Paul Berkeley, and Kevin McCluskey (far right), Harvards director of Community…

  • Campus & Community

    Police reports

    Following are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department (HUPD) for the week ending Oct. 26. The official log is located at 1033 Massachusetts Ave., sixth floor.

  • Campus & Community

    Newsmakers

    Dennis Thompson’s timely book on elections published Professor of Government and the Alfred North Whitehead Professor of Political Philosophy Dennis F. Thompson’s new book “Just Elections: Creating a Fair Electoral…

  • Campus & Community

    Weissman interns bring global experience home:

    Eva Laier 04 studied the roars of monkeys in Ugandas rainforest. Peter Hopkins 04 chatted up Serena Williams at Wimbledon. In Costa Rica, Jesse Rokicki 03 went for a week without a shower.

  • Campus & Community

    Adoption enriches mosaic of Harvard life

    She is the reason my heart beats.

  • Health

    Study: Use of acetaminophen linked to hypertension

    Out of a group of 80,000 women surveyed, those who regularly took acetaminophen or non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) – and had no previous history of high blood pressure – had…

  • Science & Tech

    Beetle mania

    Grain weevils alone cost the global economy about $35 billion, or a third of the world’s grain crop, every year. Various other beetle species damage dozens of crops including bamboo,…

  • Health

    Starship memories

    Psychologists are at odds over the idea that people can forget traumatic events then “recover” intact memories of the trauma years later. On one side are clinicians, who observe that painful memories can be repressed, banished from a trauma survivor’s consciousness until they’re “recovered” with the help of certain psychotherapeutic techniques in adulthood. Memory researchers,…

  • Science & Tech

    Harvard science historian publishes results of unprecedented 30-year census of Copernican masterpiece

    First published in 1543, Nicholas Copernicus’ De revolutionibus orbium coelestium introduced the world to the concept of a sun-centered universe. In it, Copernicus detailed how the motions of the sun,…

  • Science & Tech

    Genetic sonograms may reduce need for amniocentesis

    Radiologist Beryl Benacerraf is a Harvard Medical School clinical professor of obstetrics, gynecology and reproductive biology at Brigham and Women’s Hospital. Benacerraf, a handful of like-minded maternal-fetal ultrasound specialists, and…

  • Health

    Bacterial construct makes for elegant vaccine

    Investigators from Harvard Medical School and London’s Hammersmith Hospital have found a way to use the bacterium Listeria along with Escherichia coli to fight disease instead of causing it. In…

  • Health

    How your heart got where it is

    A team of scientists at the Harvard School of Dental Medicine and The Forsyth Institute in Boston believes it has found the answer to how bodily organs are formed. And…

  • Campus & Community

    Mikhail Gorbachev to speak at Harvard University

    Mikhail Gorbachev, former leader of the Soviet Union, will speak on “Looking Back on Perestroika” at Harvard University at 4pm on Monday, November 11.

  • Campus & Community

    Head of Ford Foundation to take wheel at KSG

    The head of the Ford Foundations South Asia operation, Gowher Rizvi, has been selected as director of the new Institute for Government Innovation at the Kennedy School of Government, Dean Joseph S. Nye Jr. announced earlier this week. Rizvi is scheduled to begin his new duties this month.

  • Campus & Community

    Report clears the air on coal ban in Dublin

    Researchers from the Harvard School of Public Health (SPH), Trinity College, and the Dublin Institute of Technology in Dublin, Ireland, examined the effect of a 1990 ban on coal sales and coal burning in Dublin on death rates in the city for six years before and after the ban was implemented. The study found that…