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  • Campus & Community

    Mental Health Awareness Week works

    I contemplated taking too many pills less than a week after I arrived at Harvard. Depression was tightening its grip on my mind, and I was certain that I was powerless to stop it. In the world according to depression, you did not earn any of the positive things that happen in your life, and…

  • Campus & Community

    Herchel Smith gives Harvard $100 million

    Herchel Smith, a distinguished chemist and philanthropist, recently bequeathed to Harvard new legacies that, when combined with his lifetime generosity, could amount to $100 million over time to support graduate fellowships, new science professorships, and an exchange program for postdoctoral fellows between Harvard and Cambridge universities. The gift, which is among the largest ever received…

  • Campus & Community

    ARCO Forum addresses Colombian terror

    A four-decade-old civil war and more than a decade of narco-terrorism have left Colombias civil institutions bruised and bloody, seriously undermining Latin Americas oldest democracy. Every 20 minutes a Colombian is killed almost 40,000 Colombians have been killed in the past decade. Approximately 1.6 million of Colombias 40 million people are poverty-stricken refugees who have…

  • Campus & Community

    Community Gifts beats own record

    In spite of a sluggish regional and national economy, Harvard employees dug deeper than ever to help those in need, pushing the 2001 – 2002 Community Gifts Through Harvard over its $1 million goal and 12 percent over last years total. In all, Harvard faculty, staff and retirees donated $1,053,756 to charities through one-time donations…

  • Campus & Community

    The Big Picture

    Hiking to the far reaches of his classroom and laboratory – 3,000 wooded acres in Petersham – Harvard Forest director David Foster stops to admire a small plot of trees that have been pulled down by researchers to simulate the effect of a hurricane.

  • Campus & Community

    It’s the missing data, stupid!

    Xiao-Li Meng is a bit different from other scientists. He not only works with the data he has, he works with the data he doesnt have.

  • Campus & Community

    Shlien to be remembered at Memorial Church

    A memorial service will be held for John Shlien, professor of education and counseling psychology emeritus, at the Memorial Church on May 29 at 3 p.m. The service will be followed by a reception in the Eliot-Lyman Room of Longfellow Hall. Shlien died March 23 at his vacation home in Big Sur, Calif. He was…

  • Campus & Community

    Police reports

    A complete police report will appear in next weeks Gazette.

  • Campus & Community

    Harvard participates in Cambridge mock disaster exercise

    Harvard University officials participated April 24 in a mock disaster exercise organized by the city of Cambridges Local Emergency Planning Committee. The drill involved local, state, and federal response teams, Cambridge Public Health and School Departments, Harvard and Massachusetts Institute of Technology officials, Boston and Somerville representatives, and other health and environmental organizations.

  • Campus & Community

    This month in Harvard history

    April 1943 – Signs of the times, as reported by Douglas A. Brown 44 (Harvard Alumni Bulletin): The end of an era came last week on Soldiers Field as the sole surviving representatives of the cavalry and horse-drawn artillery units of the Military Science Department were ridden off by student cadets to an MP detachment…

  • Campus & Community

    Faculty Council notice for April 24

    At its 13th meeting of the year, the Faculty Council discussed possible changes in grading practices and policies in Harvard College with deans Susan Pedersen (history and Undergraduate Education) and Jeffrey Wolcowitz (economics and Undergraduate Education).

  • Campus & Community

    HAA has new home

    To be more accessible to alumni and to offer improved programs and services, the Harvard Alumni Association has moved. The new address is: University Place, 124 Mt. Auburn St., sixth floor, North Entrance, Cambridge, MA 02138

  • Campus & Community

    Ruby Bridges evokes tears, smiles as she tells her tale

    Grownups and children filed quietly into the Memorial Church on April 18, their faces bright with expectation. A group of teenagers with the letters YMCA emblazoned across their sweatshirts looked for a pew where they could sit together as the church quickly filled.

  • Health

    Increased intake of dairy products may help reduce risk of insulin resistance

    Milk intake has decreased significantly over the past three decades while the prevalence of obesity and type 2 diabetes has increased. The authors of a Harvard research study note that…

  • Science & Tech

    Your community may be harmful to your health

    In 1996 the Harvard Center for Cancer Prevention reported that 50 percent of all cancer risk could be eliminated though a modified diet, increased exercise, limited alcohol intake and cessation…

  • Health

    New tool speeds study of mammalian protein function

    A new technology developed by Harvard Medical School researchers in the laboratory of Yang Shi, associate professor of pathology, extends the range of possibilities of selective interference of gene expression…

  • Science & Tech

    School of Public Health tests new emergency management software

    CAMEO (Computer-Aided Management of Emergency Operations) is a suite of software programs used by professionals such as emergency management agency specialists, firefighters, hazardous materials teams, industrial hygienists and emergency department…

  • Health

    Changes in brain shown with learning

    Harvard Medical School researchers Vadim Bolshakov, Evgeny Tsvetkov, and Bill Carlezon, based at McLean Hospital, reported with colleagues in the April 11, 2002 issue of the journal Neuron that they…

  • Campus & Community

    Al Franken is Class Day speaker

    Political satirist and comedian Al Franken will share his wit and wisdom with this years outgoing seniors as the 2002 Class Day speaker, the Harvard College Class of 2002 Senior Class Committee announced Tuesday (April 16).

  • Campus & Community

    Graduate cyber-seminar breaks new ground

    In the Locke seminar room in the Barker Center, students in History 2661, Graduate Readings in 20th Century African American History, are discussing a biography of W.E.B. Du Bois with their professors, Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham and David Levering Lewis. Lewis brings a unique perspective to the conversation: Hes the books Pulitzer Prize-winning author.

  • Campus & Community

    Titanic effort

    Wheelchair marathoner William Tan experiences the loneliness of the long-distance racer as he hauls it up Heartbreak Hill last Marathon Monday. Tan dedicated his efforts to Childrens Hospital, raising money as part of Childrens Kids at Heart Marathon Team.

  • Campus & Community

    Wilson honored for environmental efforts

    In a tree-planting ceremony marking the fifth anniversary of the Center for Health and the Global Environment at the Medical School, the center presented its first Global Environmental Citizen Award to Edward O. Wilson, the Pellegrino University Research Professor Emeritus. Wilson was honored for his efforts toward protecting the ecosystems and species of the world.

  • Campus & Community

    Prejudice is not just black and white

    Few people in post-politically-correct academia would admit that they prefer white people to black people or black people to those from the Middle East. From the classroom to the cocktail party, opinions like men are better at math, Asians make the best violinists, or women cannot be strong corporate leaders are unpopular.

  • Campus & Community

    Dragons rise up at the MAC

    For a sport whose origins date back to the 14th century, kendo — the traditional art of Japanese fencing — couldnt be more contemporary. From the sleek equipment, to its spiritual emphasis, kendo (which literally means the way of the sword) is like yoga with an attitude. Shinai in hand (a bamboo sword made of…

  • Campus & Community

    Toledo talks of fighting poverty in Peru

    Peruvian President Alejandro Toledo, the Andean-born shoeshine boy who became the elected leader of his country last May, spoke of the enormous challenges of fighting extreme poverty and revamping the economy of Peru during a public address at the Kennedy School ARCO Forum Saturday (April 13) afternoon.

  • Campus & Community

    Pusey remembered at memorial service

    The vaulted ceiling of Harvards Memorial Church echoed with praises of former Harvard President Nathan Marsh Pusey on Friday (April 12), as President Lawrence H. Summers and former presidents Derek Bok and Neil L. Rudenstine joined the Rev. Professor Peter J. Gomes and former Divinity School Dean Krister Stendahl in describing a man of uncommon…

  • Campus & Community

    A.R.T.’s season features avant-garde veterans

    When the curtain rises on The Happy Few, this years freshman musical, audiences will meet a stressed-out and sometimes sordid cast of characters (and stereotypes): exhausted test-takers, Wellesley co-eds on the prowl for rich Harvard husbands, a miserable daughter trying to escape from the clutches of her overbearing father, and a scheming dean, intent on…

  • Campus & Community

    In brief

    Center for Ethics accepts fellowship applications

  • Campus & Community

    Richard Rogers: A filmmaker’s tale

    Filmmaker Richard Rogers was known for his appetite for knowledge and his omnivorous interest in the world around him. That interest is reflected in the diversity of the films he made, ranging from portraits of American writers to an exploration of the Nicaraguan revolution to the biography of an early 19th century rural midwife, to…

  • Campus & Community

    O, to be one of the ‘happy few!’

    When the curtain rises on The Happy Few, this years freshman musical, audiences will meet a stressed-out and sometimes sordid cast of characters (and stereotypes): exhausted test-takers, Wellesley co-eds on the prowl for rich Harvard husbands, a miserable daughter trying to escape from the clutches of her overbearing father, and a scheming dean, intent on…