All articles
-
Campus & Community
The many sides of the Iraq problem:
From a discussion on reinstituting the military draft at the Kennedy School of Government to public polls on smallpox safety at the School of Public Health, Harvard is taking the nations pulse on the looming war in Iraq.
-
Campus & Community
Crimson splash back:
With the Feb. 2 meet fresh on their minds – a 179-175 loss to Princeton – the Harvard menrs swimming and diving team left plenty of breathing room between themselves and visiting Cornell and Dartmouth this past Saturday (Feb. 8). So much, in fact, that the Crimson managed a pair of sweeps against their Ivy…
-
Campus & Community
Harvard wins fifth-straight Beanpot:
After 20 minutes of hockey in the Beanpot title game this past Tuesday (Feb. 11), it looked as if the visiting Boston College womens hockey team – down just two goals against the nations No.1 team – had recovered from its 17-2 spanking delivered by the Crimson just two weeks prior. That is, until freshman…
-
Campus & Community
Deposed editor of Zimbabwe’s lone independent newspaper named Nieman Fellow:
Geoff Nyarota, a journalist forced to flee Zimbabwe after he was removed as the editor of the nations only independent newspaper, has been appointed a Nieman Fellow.
-
Campus & Community
The Big Picture:
Lisa Simpson designs and makes costumes for the Gold Dust Orphans, a theater company that puts on plays with titles such as Joan of Arkansas, Scarrie (with apologies to Stephen King), Joan Crawfords Christmas on the Pole, and the groups newest offering, The Ebonic Woman.
-
Campus & Community
Harvard Neighbors’ Quilting Bee group has a heart:
Anton wants into the act as his mother, first-time quilter Melanie Stoehr, puts the finishingtouches on a quilt, one of her Harvard Neighbors Quilting Bee group projects. The Valentine Quilt, along with more than a dozen others, will go to a local hospital.
-
Campus & Community
Shorenstein Center announces finalists for Goldsmith investigative reporting prize:
Six entries have been chosen as finalists for the 2003 Goldsmith Prize for Investigative Reporting, which is awarded each year by the Joan Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics and Public Policy at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University. The winner of the $25,000 prize will be named at an awards ceremony on…
-
Campus & Community
Data overload nothing new:
Professor of History Ann Blair 84 tells of a 17th century German scholar who created a portable cabinet in which to store his notes. Hed jot notes on cards and hang them on alphabetical hooks in the cabinet, then rearrange them as he accumulated additional information.
-
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 Feb. 8. The official log is located at 1033 Massachusetts Ave., sixth floor.
-
Campus & Community
O’Hara memorial service set
A memorial service for Donald OHara, lecturer on biological chemistry and molecular pharmacology in the Department of Medicine, will be held Feb. 21 at 2 p.m. in the Faculty Room of Gordon Hall, Harvard Medical School. University faculty, staff, and students are invited to attend.
-
Campus & Community
This month in Harvard history
Feb. 9, 1970 – About 100 individuals take part in an SDS (Students for a Democratic Society) demonstration protesting the presence of a U.S. Army recruiter at the Office of…
-
Campus & Community
Come Dasher, come Prancer
A herd of bicycles is covered by one of the innumerable snowshowers of recent weeks.
-
Campus & Community
Hasty’s honor:
A good-natured Whitney – er, Anjelica – Huston took a ribbing as well as a faux beating Thursday (Feb. 6) to earn her pudding pot as this years Woman of the Year for the nations oldest collegiate drama troupe, Harvards Hasty Pudding Theatricals.
-
Science & Tech
Studies challenge claims that percent plans provide viable alternative to affirmative action
Although the Texas, California and Florida plans appear to be very similar, in fact they differ greatly. There are key distinctions that must be noted when considering their implementation and…
-
Campus & Community
Beanpot, 1st round: Feast for women, famine for men
To true believers, the opening round of this past Monday’s (Feb. 3) Beanpot tournament at the FleetCenter started auspiciously for the Harvard men’s hockey team.
-
Campus & Community
Europe’s future begins to unfold:
A largely unheralded meeting is under way in Europe that some say is akin to a constitutional convention for a slowly emerging supernation but that experts at a Harvard conference Friday (Jan. 31) said is unlikely to produce startling changes in the European Union.
-
Campus & Community
Deconstructing dimensions to understand the universe:
Nima Arkani-Hamed is searching exotic places for clues to questions about our universes construction and the gravitational glue that holds it together.
-
Campus & Community
Pigment tied to blindness, cancer:
For a long time, scientists have wondered why blacks seldom get skin cancer or macular degeneration, the major cause of blindness in elderly white people. Experiments at the Childrens Hospital in Boston have yielded one possible answer – the black pigment called melanin apparently protects them in a peculiar way.
-
Campus & Community
These shoes were made for walking?:
Sensible or fashion-foolish … practical or stylish … sandal, boot, slipper, or clog … shoes in all their forms almost universally capture our fancy.
-
Campus & Community
‘V’: Not just for Valentine’s Day anymore:
In anticipation of Feb. 14, two groups of Harvard students are preparing to mark the occasion not with hearts and cupids but with a consciousness-raising celebration of the other V: vagina.
-
Campus & Community
HBS receives $25 million from venture capitalist Arthur Rock
Arthur Rock, a member of the Harvard Business School M.B.A. Class of 1951 and a pioneering venture capitalist who helped form numerous start-ups that went on to become 20th century success stories, including Intel Corp., Teledyne, Scientific Data Systems, and Apple Computer, has donated $25 million to the School to fund the establishment of the…
-
Campus & Community
Ombudsmen open for business:
The new University Ombuds Office, providing confidential and impartial problem-solving assistance to all faculty, staff, and students, opened on Feb. 1.
-
Campus & Community
Berman named VP for finance:
Ann E. Berman has been named vice president for finance and chief financial officer of the University, President Lawrence H. Summers announced on Monday (Feb. 3).
-
Campus & Community
Newsmakers
Nathan named Howland Medal winner The American Pediatric Society has named David G. Nathan, president emeritus of Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, the 2003 recipient of the John Howland Medal, the society’s…
-
Campus & Community
Making meaningful eye contact(s):
Perry Rosenthal considers himself an agnostic, but recently he has had the disquieting sense that his life may be shaped by some higher purpose.
-
Campus & Community
Buckley, champion of the Victorians, dies at 85:
Jerome H. Buckley, the Gurney Professor of English Literature Emeritus, died Jan. 28 at Massachusetts General Hospital at the age of 85. The cause of death was respiratory failure following a series of strokes.
-
Campus & Community
In brief
Sports page change For special Beanpot coverage, see pages 14 and 15. CSWR summer grants available The Center for the Study of World Religions at Harvard Divinity School has announced…