All articles


  • Health

    Polarity gene yields clues to organization of cell signaling, structural growth

    Researchers are beginning to understand how a gene called “stardust” works to set up the basic top-down architecture of the epithelial cells that line the gut, skin, and many other…

  • Health

    Technique enables quick accounting of gene function

    Now that whole genomes have been sequenced, a group of scientists has geared up for the next phase: identification and classification of newly discovered coding regions. The DNA microchip, developed…

  • Science & Tech

    Diagnosis by database shows promise

    A relatively new approach to researching cancer involves looking at the actions of thousands of genes in cancer tumors. This technique just recently became possible because, using new applications of…

  • Health

    Pain and pleasure activate same brain structures

    David Borsook is a Harvard Medical School associate professor of radiology, who both treats patients and conducts research. “Over 15 years of seeing patients with pain it became obvious that…

  • Campus & Community

    Two named 2002 Marshall Scholarship winners

    Lauren Baer and Sarah Moss, both Harvard College seniors, have won Marshall Scholarships. The prestigious scholarships allow young American leaders to study at a university in Britain. On Dec. 5, the British ambassador to the United States, Sir Christopher Meyer, announced the names of the 40 American students who will become the new Marshall class.

  • Campus & Community

    Alexander wins International Rhodes

    Karin Alexander of Lowell House is a winner of an International Rhodes Scholarship. Alexander plans to further her work in social studies, in which she concentrated, during her time at Oxford University. Alexander, who grew up in Zimbabwe, will be pursuing a degree in Development Studies at Oxford. She wants to prepare herself to work…

  • Campus & Community

    In brief

    Hauser Center accepting fellowship applicants The Hauser Center for Nonprofit Organizations is currently accepting applications for the 2002-03 Doctoral Fellowships in Nonprofit Sector Studies. The center will award up to…

  • Campus & Community

    Newsmakers

    Faculty selects Lewis for Bond Book Award David Levering Lewis, the Martin Luther King Jr. University Professor at Rutgers University, is the recipient of this year’s Horace Mann Bond Book…

  • Campus & Community

    Holiday tree trimming

    John Carrol from Facilities Maintenance Operations trims trees in JFK Park during the warmer weather earlier this month.

  • Campus & Community

    Edward Wagner dies at 77

    Edward Wagner, who taught Korean studies at Harvard for 35 years, died Dec. 7, 2001, at the Walden Rehabilitation and Nursing Center in Concord of pneumonia and other complications from AlzheimerÕs disease. He was 77.

  • Campus & Community

    The end

    The good news is that the universe will last forever. The bad news is that we will be seeing less and less of it as galaxies fade and become frozen in time.

  • Campus & Community

    Stone resigns as Fellow of Harvard College

    Following twenty-seven years as a member of the Harvard Corporation, Robert G. Stone, Jr., will conclude his service as Fellow of Harvard College at the end of the 2001-02 academic year.

  • Campus & Community

    President Summers Appoints William A. Graham Acting Dean of the Harvard Divinity School

    William A. Graham, Murray A. Albertson Professor of Middle Eastern Studies and Professor of the History of Religion in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, will serve as Acting Dean of the Harvard Divinity School pending the appointment of a permanent dean, President Lawrence H. Summers announced today.

  • Campus & Community

    Harvard After School Initiative announces $400,000 in grants

    From soccer to science, civics to computers, the after-school offerings of 21 programs serving Boston youth got a $400,000 boost yesterday (Jan. 9), as Harvard formally honored its agreement to…

  • Campus & Community

    The beauty of numbers

    After three hours of mathematics one recent Saturday morning, 25 Boston middle school teachers paused briefly for lunch, after which they began their fourth hour of class totally engaged with…

  • Campus & Community

    Contemporary approach to art

    When Linda Norden got hired by the Fogg Art Museum as associate curator of contemporary art, she faced a challenging problem. Museums like the Fogg collect art objects, and they…

  • Campus & Community

    Goodbye, Mr. Chips

    If you asked most college students at most colleges to name their favorite class, chances are the words “freshman chemistry” wouldn’t come up all that often. On the other hand,…

  • Campus & Community

    Harvard welcomes 2001-02 Fulbright Scholars

    Thirty-seven foreign scholars and professionals and a senior fellow at Harvard have been named 2001 – 02 Fulbright Grant recipients. Sponsored by the U.S. Department of State, participating governments, and host institutions in the United States and abroad, these grants allow scholars from across the globe to lecture or conduct research at Harvard during the…

  • Campus & Community

    Spiegelman speaks at Carpenter

    Comic books have come a long way.

  • Campus & Community

    Quigley to direct Art Museums’ digitizing

    Acknowledging the essential role that technology plays in all aspects of museum work today, the Harvard University Art Museums (HUAM) has announced its first-ever appointment of a director of digital information and technology.

  • Campus & Community

    Balancing act

    Alan Dershowitz, the Felix Frankfurter Professor of Law, has long been a defender of civil liberties. The Sept. 11 attacks on America have brought about some changes in his thinking and some readjustments of old beliefs to fit present circumstances.

  • Campus & Community

    See light at end of semester darkened by tragedy

    As the academic year began this fall, the annual rites of passage from high school to college, from vacation back to school, were rendered indelible by the events of Sept. 11. Many of us will see no before-and-after division more clearly in our lives.

  • Campus & Community

    Crash course

    Unlike other days, Sept. 11 didnt end at midnight. The country still roils the reverberations of the terrorist attacks continue to be felt in spaces private and public, including this Universitys classrooms and in the quiet of professors research activities. Teachers and students alike struggle to understand, and respond to, the unprecedented tragedy.

  • Campus & Community

    A prescription for creative writing

    Hearing the phrase What do you make of her headache? within the walls of a medical school, you might think you are listening in on a class on, say, how to take a medical history. But in a small, brightly lit classroom at the Harvard Medical School every Tuesday night this fall, 10 medical students…

  • Campus & Community

    Thompson appointed senior adviser

    Dennis Thompson, Alfred North Whitehead Professor of Political Philosophy and former associate provost, was appointed senior adviser to the president by President Lawrence H. Summers, Summers announced Wednesday (Dec. 12). In this new part-time position, Thompson will work closely with Summers and Provost Steven Hyman on university-wide policies and priorities. Among his principal responsibilities will…

  • Campus & Community

    Hyman back at Harvard

    Provost Steven Hyman had barely arrived from Logan Airport for his first day of work Monday (Dec. 10) before he was off to a meeting. Im an old hand at this, he joked. Ive been here five minutes.

  • Campus & Community

    Seminars move to Arboretum

    What do an Eagle Scout, a mountain climber, a concert pianist, a skydiver, and a Mormon missionary have in common? Theyre all Harvard Students who have been named as Rhodes Scholars this year. After a day of final interviews and anxious waiting, the five students got the news on Saturday (Dec. 8) that theyd been…

  • Campus & Community

    Distinguished visitor

    Martin Ziguele (second from right), Prime Minister of the Central African Republic, tours Harvard recently, accompanied by former Massachusetts Gov. Michael S. Dukakis (center), translator Alvaro Martin-Guerrero (left), and University Marshal Rick Hunt (right).

  • Campus & Community

    Joint Center for Housing Studies summer fellows share research

    The Joint Center for Housing Studies at Harvard University announced Dec. 4 that its summer 2001 fellows, Kathryn M. Lawler and Ellen Stiefvater, completed and presented research papers on two important community development topics in partnership – the Neighborhood Reinvestment Corp. and the NeighborWorks network. Lawler and Stiefvater are candidates in the master of Public…

  • Campus & Community

    Service recalls ‘a loving, kind’ man

    A chill, persistent rain spattered the puddled streets as a crowd of somberly dressed folks under glistening umbrellas slowly made their way into the Presbyterian church at Madison Avenue and 73rd Street in New York City.