All articles


  • Science & Tech

    Americans don’t see obesity as serious health problem

    Using unique survey data that they collected, researchers Taeku Lee and J. Eric Oliver presented the first examination of public attitudes towards obesity and obesity policy. They found that, contrary…

  • Health

    Heart attack patients may benefit from drinking tea

    A study published in the May 7, 2002, issue of Circulation: Journal of the American Heart Association found that tea consumption is associated with an increased rate of survival following…

  • Science & Tech

    Bad dental health could affect military readiness

    Phillip Dexter Woods is a dentist and an Army reservist. Until he graduated in June 2002, Woods was also a student in a master’s program at the Harvard School of…

  • Health

    Peripheral ‘Swatch’ watches are powerful force in modulating body’s circadian rhythms

    Clinicians have known for years that organs function at different rates — the heart beats, kidneys transport ions and electrolytes, the liver metabolizes lipids, sugars, and amino acids differently over…

  • Science & Tech

    Mexican-American women navigate school and work more successfully than men

    Only 19 percent of Mexican-American men in 1990 were upwardly mobile professionally, compared to 31 percent of women, and only nine percent of men worked in professional/technical jobs, compared to…

  • Campus & Community

    Celebrating spring

    Springfest this year bloomed into a bigger, better event that included the entire Harvard College community, thanks to co-sponsorship from President Lawrence H. Summers.

  • Campus & Community

    The whole nine yards

    Add parades, a cappella, and fan dancing to the seven livelies and youve got some small notion of the astonishing array of arts and entertainment that will be offered up to the Harvard Community and friends over the upcoming week known as Arts First. This 10th anniversary of the annual event features concerts, poetry readings,…

  • Campus & Community

    Renowned archaeologist Willey dies at 89

    Gordon Randolph Willey died of heart failure on the morning of April 28, in Cambridge. He was 89.

  • Campus & Community

    Mallardi named recipient of Vosgerchian Teaching Award

    Claire Mallardi, lecturer on dramatic arts and artistic director Emerita, Radcliffe College, has been named the recipient of the 2001-02 Luise Vosgerchian Teaching Award. Administered by the Office for the Arts at Harvard, the award carries an honorarium of $10,000.

  • Campus & Community

    Hawes dedication

    Rodney A. Hawes (MBA 69), reflected in a video monitor, speaks at the dedication of the new Harvard Business School building that bears his name at a ceremony Friday (April 26). Hawes Halls eight classrooms are equipped with advanced technology to facilitate the dynamic interchange between faculty and students in the Schools hallmark case teaching…

  • Campus & Community

    Thirteen Harvard scholars elected to AAAS

    The American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the nations pre-eminent learned society and research institution, announced earlier this week its newly elected fellows and foreign honorary members. Members of this years class – composed of 177 fellows and 30 foreign honorary members – were honored for their achievements in fields ranging from mathematics to medicine,…

  • Campus & Community

    When special gifts meet special needs

    Its Saturday morning and 6-year-old Desean Watson is hugging his Big Buddy, Harvard senior Nikhil Dutta.

  • Campus & Community

    When nature and culture intersect

    Donna Haraway, the prominent cultural theorist, has shifted her focus from genetic engineering, primatology, and cyborgs to dogs.

  • Campus & Community

    Former agriculture secretary to direct IOP

    Daniel R. Glickman, who has spent more than 25 years in public service on both the federal and local levels, has been named director of the Institute of Politics (IOP) at the Kennedy School of Government by Dean Joseph S. Nye Jr. Glickman will succeed Sen. David Pryor, who will be leaving the directors post…

  • Campus & Community

    Silbert, Farrell receive activist award at KSG

    Two people who have spent much of their lives working to challenge and correct social injustice were recognized this past Tuesday (April 30) at an award ceremony organized by the Kennedy Schools Center for Public Leadership.

  • Campus & Community

    Seminar explores Islamic finance

    The U.S. Treasury Department tapped into Harvards scholarly expertise last Friday (April 26) when about 100 government officials attended a seminar in Washington titled Islamic Finance 101.

  • Campus & Community

    Harvard Foundation Award to honor harmony

    Ali S. Asani, Professor of the Practice of Indo-Muslim Languages and Cultures, will join 24 students in being honored at the annual David Aloian Dinner and Student/Faculty Award Ceremony to be held at the end of the semester in the Quincy House Dining Hall. For the past 20 years, the director of the Harvard Foundation…

  • Campus & Community

    Sharing the cost of family leave

    Paid family leave is where the rubber of two of Americas most cherished private institutions – the family and business – meets the road of public government.

  • Campus & Community

    Housing Center announces fellows

    The Joint Center for Housing Studies, a collaborative unit affiliated with the Harvard Design School and the Kennedy School of Government, has named masters degree candidates Connie Chung and Alastair Smith as its 2002 Emerging Leaders Fellowship recipients. Both Chung, an urban planning candidate at the Graduate School of Design, and Smith, a masters degree…

  • Campus & Community

    François Bovon named Luce Fellow in Theology

    The Association of Theological Schools (ATS) in the United States and Canada and the Henry Luce Foundation, Inc., have named François Bovon as a Henry Luce III Fellow in Theology for 2002-03. Bovon, the Frothingham Professor of the History of Religion at the Divinity School, was named a fellow in the category of Bible and…

  • Campus & Community

    ‘Social entrepreneurs’ garner prize

    Harvard Business School (HBS) students Matthew Mugo Fields 02 and Lucas Klein 02 and their business partner Jason Green like to begin their business plan presentations with a question: How does the U.S. Government forecast prison growth?

  • Campus & Community

    Nieman Foundation administers first Taylor Award

    An article by Les Gura of the Hartford Courant about an instructor at Yale University who became the focus of stories that unfairly cast him as a murder suspect, is the inaugural winner of the Taylor Family Award for Fairness in Newspapers. The award, endowed by the former publisher of The Boston Globe and the…

  • Campus & Community

    FEMA officials recount agency’s role in Sept. 11

    The events of Sept. 11 have changed the way America responds to disasters, Daniel A. Craig, regional director (Region One) of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), told a Harvard audience last month. FEMA needs to lead the charge in implementing these changes.

  • Campus & Community

    Baseball pours it on

    Up until the month of showers, success for the Harvard baseball team appeared to be postponed indefinitely. The Crimson notched just three victories in 14 outings during their opening month of play, dropping their first six games of the season. Yet ever since a doubleheader sweep over reigning Ivy champion Princeton in early April, Harvard…

  • Campus & Community

    Three seniors receive Peabody Traveling Fellowship

    Harvard seniors Erica Levy, Christopher Papagianis, and Marc Wallenstein have been awarded the George Peabody Gardner Traveling Fellowship for 2002. The fellowship, available to graduating seniors who are concentrators (or joint concentrators) in the Departments of Visual and Environmental Studies, Anthropology, English, History and Literature, Literature, or Philosophy, is awarded to students who demonstrate a…

  • Campus & Community

    HAA awards Harvard Medal to four

    The Harvard Alumni Association (HAA) has announced the recipients of the 2002 Harvard Medal: Peter A. Brooke 52, M.B.A. 54, Sharon Elliott Gagnon, A.M. 65, Ph.D. 72, John A. Lithgow 67 and Daniel C. Tosteson 46, M.D. 48. First given in 1981, the Harvard Medal recognizes extraordinary service to the University. President Lawrence H. Summers…

  • Campus & Community

    The Big Picture

    Youve heard of the Cambridge folk renaissance? Well, Lenny Solomon was there.

  • Campus & Community

    Newsmakers

    Dibner Institute appoints Cavicchi for second year

  • Campus & Community

    NAS elects eight from Harvard

    President Lawrence H. Summers and seven Harvard professors are among the 72 newly elected members of the National Academy of Sciences, the academy announced Tuesday (April 30). Members are elected in recognition of their distinguished and continuing achievements in original research. Those elected bring the total number of active members to 1,907. With its eight…