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  • Campus & Community

    Lewis A. Tyler, leader in international education

    Lewis A. Tyler, a force for the advancement of Latin America and the Caribbean through international education, died May 30 in Boston.

  • Campus & Community

    Police Reports

    Following are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department (HUPD) for the week ending Saturday, June 8. The official log is located at 1033 Massachusetts Ave. (sixth floor).

  • Campus & Community

    This month in Harvard History

    June 1894 – The newly incorporated Radcliffe College holds its first Commencement in the auditorium of Fay House. At the request of President Elizabeth Cary Agassiz, the graduates wear pretty, simple dresses instead of caps and gowns, which Agassiz deems excessively masculine and potentially provocative.

  • Campus & Community

    Erratum

    In the degree chart on page 24 of last weeks Gazette, the figures for the Law Schools doctor of juridical science and doctor of law degrees should have been 546 and 8, respectively.

  • Campus & Community

    Education secretary touts public school reform

    U.S. Secretary of Education Rod Paige told a Kennedy School conference on education and accountability Monday (June 10) that the Bush administrations reform program of testing, accountability, and school choice is a solution for American schools that are failing to educate a sizeable number of children

  • Campus & Community

    Cooking up quite a story

    Think about this the next time youre waiting for your burgers to cook on the grill: How was cooking invented? Today, all societies depend on cooked food, but when and how did cooking begin?

  • Science & Tech

    Cooking up a story of apes and humans

    For humans, cooking played a major role in the development of smaller jaws and teeth, bigger brains, smaller guts, shorter arms, and longer legs, according to Richard Wrangham, professor of…

  • Health

    Six new breast cancer-susceptibility genes found

    The discovery of six new cancer-susceptibility genes grew out of more than 10 years of research by Alan D’Andrea into Fanconi anemia, a condition known to affect only 500 families…

  • Science & Tech

    The next big thing in mining the genome

    About 99.9 percent of the 3.1 billion base pairs in the human genome are the same from person to person. The remaining 0.1 percent of differences comprises more than 10…

  • Campus & Community

    Commencement week: Feature photos

    Bac break Soojin Yim and Abby Schlatter (foreground) rest before joining other members of the Class of 2002 at the Baccalaureate Service at the Memorial Church on June 4. (Staff…

  • Campus & Community

    The year in review at Harvard University

    When Lawrence H. Summers settled into Massachusetts Hall on July 1, he opened a year that saw achievement and glory, inquiry and debate, exhilaration and more sadness than any of us could imagine.

  • Campus & Community

    African Studies awards travel grants

    The Committee on African Studies has awarded eight student grants for travel to Sub-Saharan Africa this summer. The four juniors who received the grants will be conducting research for their senior honors theses, while the four graduate student recipients will be researching their doctoral dissertations. The graduate student grants are funded by an endowment established…

  • Campus & Community

    HBS Dean’s Award lauds leadership, service

    Martin Gonzalez refused to let colon cancer prevent him from making the most of his Harvard Business School (HBS) experience inside and outside the classroom. Mo-Yun Lei used her education background to enrich the learning process of her HBS classmates. In recognition of their service to the Business School community, these students received the sixth…

  • Campus & Community

    Mother Jones founder finishes his ‘to-do’ list

    Almost 30 years after he dropped out of college, Bill Dodd sat in his office, looked at the pile in his in box, and decided to tackle the task that had been on his agenda the longest.

  • Campus & Community

    Making movies: Bullock sees life in full color

    Every Wednesday night growing up in tiny Palmyra, N.J., Taii Bullock 02 would sit down to family dinner at her Aunt Jeanes house with at least 20 relatives.

  • Campus & Community

    Laura Clancy and the poetry of giving

    Laura Clancy cant tell you how she fills her pre-summer days. The best way she has to describe it is a blur of so many random things. But what else can you expect from someone who is gearing up (as she does every spring) for a seven-week summer program for 700 urban children at 12…

  • Campus & Community

    SPH graduate will develop diabetes-intervention program for Native Americans

    Donald Warne is about to make history, but hes not happy about it.

  • Campus & Community

    ‘Democracy works, and you can get stuff done’

    Elizabeth Drye has a simple philosophy – do what youre interested in and follow the opportunities. Shes interested in so many things that this has led to a complex life – Stanford University, Harvard School of Public Health, Congress, the White House, Harvard Medical School, and motherhood.

  • Campus & Community

    ‘Gravitating’ toward international public health

    Four years as a Harvard College undergraduate have taken graduating senior Duncan Smith-Rohrberg from believing in mind over matter to pondering matters of the mind.

  • Campus & Community

    Two seniors awarded Radcliffe’s Fay Prize

    Susie Yi Huang, a chemistry concentrator who will graduate with bachelors and masters degrees, and Andrew Leren Lynn, a history and literature concentrator who will graduate with a bachelor of arts degree, are the winners of the 2002 Captain Jonathan Fay Prize, which is awarded by the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard University.…

  • Campus & Community

    University Choir to release seventh CD

    Next month, the Harvard University Choir will release its seventh CD, Choral Music of Amy Beach and Randall Thompson. Recorded in Londons 12th century Temple Church while the choir was on its European tour last summer, the CD includes noted American composer Amy Beachs three-movement a cappella motet, Help us, O God, and Alleluia by…

  • Campus & Community

    Seniors elected to Phi Beta Kappa

    The following are the graduating seniors elected to Phi Beta Kappa:

  • Campus & Community

    Seniors take oath at ROTC ceremony

    In a speech at the Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC) Commissioning Ceremony Wednesday (June 5), President Lawrence H. Summers made it clear that the University can accommodate both intellectual freedom and patriotism.

  • Campus & Community

    This month in Harvard history

    June 19, 1725 – The Harvard Corporation elects Benjamin Wadsworth, Class of 1690, as Harvards eighth President.

  • Campus & Community

    Erratum

    Because of incorrect information supplied to the Gazette, a page 8 article in the May 30 issue, Biotech Club Announces Winners, reported an incorrect title for David Edwards. His correct title is Gordon McKay Professor of the Practice of Biomedical Engineering.

  • Campus & Community

    ‘The age of Ozzy Osbourne’

    As he edged into the main theme of his Phi Beta Kappa oration, The Fate of Eloquence in the Age of Ozzy Osbourne, historian Simon Schama divulged some interesting biographical clues to the sources of his own eloquent speaking and writing.

  • Campus & Community

    Extension School announces prizewinners

    This year, the Extension Schools Commencement Speaker award will go to Linda Hime Newberry, A.L.M. 02, whose speech is titled An Extension Degree as a Patchwork Quilt. Francis J. Aguilar, professor of Business Administration Emeritus, will deliver the main address, titled Cleared for Take-Off, at the graduate certificate ceremonies.

  • Campus & Community

    CSWR gives summer grants

    The Center for the Study of World Religions (CSWR) at the Divinity School has announced the recipients of its 2002 Summer Research Grant Awards in the field of religion, health, and healing. The funded research promises to contribute significantly to the community of scholarship on the intersection of religion and healing. Students will present their…

  • Campus & Community

    Five Radcliffe fellows featured in new video on Web

    Question: What do the growth of suburbia, contemporary landscape painting, the evolution of sea urchins, marriage laws in colonial India, and the women writers of imperial China have in common?