All articles


  • Campus & Community

    Two named Newcombe Fellows

    Harvard doctoral candidates Daniel Fried and Curie Virag have been named winners of the 2002 Charlotte W. Newcombe Doctoral Dissertation Fellowship competition by the Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation. Fried and Virag join 31 doctoral candidates from 17 universities nationwide to receive the award, which supports original and significant study of ethical or religious values…

  • Campus & Community

    Allen, Pasachoff are Rappaport Fellows

    Emily Allen, a first-year student at Harvard Law School, and Eloise Pasachoff, a second-year student in the four-year joint degree program at the Law School and the Kennedy School of Government (KSG), have been selected to serve as 2002 Rappaport Fellows in the Rappaport Honors Program in Law and Public Service at Suffolk University Law…

  • Campus & Community

    Designing new careers at GSD

    As an electrical engineer in the aerospace industry, Ksenia Kolcio spends her time designing satellites. Knowing that her handiwork is in orbit thousands of miles above the Earths surface is a source of satisfaction, but Kolcio has always yearned for more.

  • Campus & Community

    Economist Dorfman dies at 85

    Robert Dorfman, emeritus professor of political economy, died June 24 in his home in Belmont after a long illness. He was 85.

  • Campus & Community

    Physicist Costas D. Papaliolios dies at 71

    Physicist Costas D. Papaliolios, professor of physics emeritus at Harvard University, died June 6. He was 71.

  • Campus & Community

    GSE professor Donald Oliver is dead at 73

    Donald Oliver, a professor of education who delighted in debate and developed a curriculum to stimlate discussion of social issues in junior and senior high schools, died June 28 at the age of 73.

  • Campus & Community

    Reporter takes a swim …uh … row — in a scull

    It is early morning and a single scull glides over the rivers surface. Propelled by the rowers rhythmic strokes, it seems one with the water as it whispers past a family of geese or threads needle-like through the bridges arc.

  • Campus & Community

    NAS ‘terror report’ calls for action

    A new report by a National Academy of Sciences panel co-chaired by Harvard Emeritus Professor Lewis M. Branscomb calls for the United States to take immediate steps, such as better protection of nuclear weapons and materials, to reduce its vulnerability to terror attacks. The report also outlines urgent areas for future research.

  • Campus & Community

    Why the brains of humans are bigger

    Researchers have identified a protein that may help to explain why the brains cerebral cortex is disproportionately larger in humans than in other species, a finding that appears in the July 19 issue of Science and adds an important piece to the developing blueprint of the part of the brain responsible for the intellectual abilities…

  • Campus & Community

    The proletariat rises up at the Carpenter Center

    Think of Paul Gauguin, working as a stockbroker in Paris and painting on weekends. Or of Maurice de Vlaminck, supporting his family as a violin teacher while creating his incandescent landscapes.

  • Campus & Community

    Cambridge, Harvard link to help homeless

    They werent playing around while playing a round, because they were golfing for a serious cause.

  • Campus & Community

    Crimson crew cleans up at Henley Regatta

    Capping off a tremendous 2002 season, Harvards heavyweight crew captured three championship titles – a new school record – at the prestigious Henley Royal Regatta, which concluded July 7 on the Thames River in Oxfordshire, England.

  • Campus & Community

    Teaching advocacy and activism

    Forty years after their forerunners took to the lunch counters and streets of the American South, 21 young activists are putting their own spin on civil rights: by dancing, teaching, praying, and learning.

  • Campus & Community

    Highlights of recently completed union agreements

    As of June 13, the University and its three principal service unions completed negotiations resulting in significant wage increases for workers employed directly by the University and by outside contractors. Members of the Service Employees International Union (SEIU, Local 254), representing custodians, the Hotel Employees Restaurant Employees International Union (HEREIU, Local 26), representing dining hall…

  • Campus & Community

    University expands wages, benefits

    Seven months after a Harvard committee recommended changes to improve wages and working conditions for the Universitys lowest-paid workers, wages have been raised and a parity policy enacted to ensure that contracted employees receive compensation equivalent to their Harvard counterparts.

  • Campus & Community

    Pearson Hunt, authority on corporate finance, dies

    Former Harvard Business School (HBS) Professor Pearson Hunt, an authority on corporate finance whose research helped shape modern financial management practices, died June 30 at Mt. Auburn Hospital in Cambridge. Hunt was 93.

  • Campus & Community

    The Big Picture: René Becker, baker

    René Becker has a thing for bread.

  • Campus & Community

    2002 Board of Overseers and HAA Directors announced

    The President of the Harvard Alumni Association announced the results of the annual election of new members of the Harvard Board of Overseers and the HAA Elected Directors. The results were released at the annual meeting of the association following the Universitys 351st Commencement. The five newly elected Overseers, in order of their finish, are:…

  • Campus & Community

    Connecting children to resources

    The Harvard Childrens Initiative and the Institute for Community Health in Cambridge released a report last month on the gap-s in Cambridges current child mental health system in hopes of making Cambridge a model community in its handling of child mental health issues.

  • Campus & Community

    Former Dining Services director, Frank Weissbecker, dies at 80

    Frank J. Weissbecker, director of Harvard Dining Services for nearly three decades, died of lung cancer June 27 at his home in Weston. He was 80.

  • Campus & Community

    Police Reports

    Following are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department (HUPD) for the weeks beginning June 9 and ending July 13. The official log is located at 1033 Massachusetts Ave., sixth floor.

  • Campus & Community

    New tenure

    Ellen Condliffe Lagemann (right), in her second day as dean of the Graduate School of Education, visited the Cambridge Harvard Summer Academy at the Cambridge Rindge and Latin School Tuesday (July 16) with Professor Kay Merseth, director of the Teacher Education Program at the GSE (left). After visiting math, social studies, and literature classes, Lagemann…

  • Campus & Community

    This month in Harvard history

    July 17, 1810 – President Samuel Webber dies in office.

  • Campus & Community

    Ring around the city

    Imagine taking public transportation from Harvard Medical School to East Cambridge and never passing through Downtown Crossing – for the local inhabitant, a miraculous feat.

  • Campus & Community

    New MS drugs are found

    Multiple sclerosis is an unnerving disease. White blood cells, which usually protect the body against illness, launch attacks on the central nervous system. These rebellious cells destroy fatty sheaths that surround and protect nerve cells, interfering with conduction of nerve impulses in the brain and spinal cord. Movement, coordination, and sensation become impaired, leading to…

  • Health

    New multiple sclerosis drugs are found

    Five years ago, scientists at Harvard University began to take a close look at Copolymer 1, a treatment for multiple sclerosis, that is put together from a string of amino…

  • Health

    Diabetes treatment linked to increased blood pressure

    Type II diabetes accounts for the majority of cases of the disease, and is a huge public health problem: As many as 16 million individuals in the United States have…

  • Science & Tech

    What students know best

    A research project called Pathways for Student Success has taken a unique approach to finding ways to help high school students achieve at a high rate. Rather than focusing on…