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  • Campus & Community

    Carroll embodies diversity at GSE

    Claudia Carroll describes her life as a peasant cart, cobbled together from odds and ends, with rickety wheels about to fall off.

  • Campus & Community

    Central lighting

    After two years of excavating, pounding, drilling, and building, the east light court of Widener Library has been transformed into a luminous new reading room. Made possible through the generosity of Charles G. Phillips 70 and his wife Candace, the Phillips Reading Room is a controlled room for the use of noncirculating materials that are…

  • Campus & Community

    Du Bois Institute welcomes 16 fellows

    Sixteen new fellows have joined the W.E.B. Du Bois Institute for Afro-American Research at Harvard this fall for one or two semesters of the 2001-02 academic year. Founded in 1975, the institute is the oldest research center of its kind, and has supported the scholarly work of nearly 300 alumni.

  • Campus & Community

    The man in the mirror

    In todays workplace, where Wall Street rules, the World Wide Web sets the speed limit, and change is status quo, doing work that is both professionally excellent and ethically responsible is harder than ever. Yet some professionals manage, even amidst this turbulence, to do good work. Others fail. Why? What conditions need to exist for…

  • Campus & Community

    Jackson is named associate dean of research

    Howell Jackson has been named associate dean for research at the Law School (HLS). In this position, Jackson will oversee, coordinate, and promote the Law Schools extensive research activities, including research by members of the faculty and the work of HLSs 17 research centers, programs, and projects.

  • Campus & Community

    Chasing air masses, measuring greenhouse gases

    As policymakers scratch their heads over what to do about increasing levels of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere, Harvard atmospheric chemistry researchers are pioneering new ways to measure these levels. Were chasing air masses, says Christoph Gerbig, a research associate working with Steven Wofsy, Abbot Lawrence Rotch Professor of Atmospheric and Environmental Science. Wofsy, Gerbig,…

  • Campus & Community

    SPH bioterrorism discussion timely

    It is the nations public health system, not the military, that is squarely in the path of terrorist attacks using biological weapons, and it is the public health system that should be strengthened to deal with future assaults, according to experts gathered at the School of Public Health last week (Oct. 25-26).

  • Campus & Community

    Summer interns green Harvard

    A group of summer interns are showing the way to a more environmentally friendly Harvard, featuring cars that run on soybeans, efficient buildings, and organically nurtured lawns.

  • Campus & Community

    Crimson mows down Big Green in 2nd half

    Extending its unbeaten streak to six games in astonishing fashion this past Saturday at Harvard Stadium, the Crimson football team (6-0, 4-0 Ivy) rallied from a 21-point halftime deficit to defeat Dartmouth (1-5, 1-3 Ivy) 31-21. A season-record crowd of 12,000 witnessed what proved to be the largest come-from-behind victory in the programs 128-year history.

  • Campus & Community

    Harvard has B.U. bounce

    The Harvard field hockey team (8-6, 3-2 Ivy) dropped its second consecutive match against an Ivy opponent this past Friday (Oct. 26), falling 4-2 at home against Dartmouth, but bounced back in a 1-0 win over cross-town rival Boston University – the teams first against the Terriers in 10 years – on Sunday (Oct. 28).…

  • Campus & Community

    Police reports

    Following are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department (HUPD) for the week ending Saturday, Oct. 27. The official log is located at HUPD headquarters, 29 Garden St.

  • Campus & Community

    In Brief

    HMS creates bio-threat Web site

  • Campus & Community

    Facing your fears

    In honor of the holiday, the Harvard Lampoon building is trying to look scary but only succeeds at looking a bit winsome. Neither Christopher Angelakis nor Helen Shapiro, lunching on the steps, seems the least bit intimidated.

  • Campus & Community

    This month in Harvard history

    Nov. 6, 1770 – Rumblings of Revolution: Joseph Avery, Class of 1771, orates on Oppression and Tyranny before the Speaking Club.

  • Campus & Community

    Doty, former senior research associate, dies at 77

    Helga Boedtker Doty, a molecular biologist at Harvard University, died on Oct. 23 following a stroke. She was 77.

  • Campus & Community

    Trigger is found for sperm mobility

    Penetration is never easy for a sperm. Getting to an egg has been compared to a salmon swimming upstream to spawn. Both have to lash their tails vigorously to reach…

  • Campus & Community

    Steven E. Hyman named provost

    Steven E. Hyman, former professor of psychiatry at Harvard and current director of the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH), has been named provost of the University, President Lawrence H. Summers announced Monday, Oct. 29.

  • Science & Tech

    Atmospheric chemists fly high and low for novel carbon dioxide measurements

    Political leaders throughout the world have taken notice of the increasing levels of carbon in the atmosphere and have begun negotiations on how to mitigate “greenhouse” gases through accords such…

  • Science & Tech

    It’s easy being green

    Eleven interns worked on seven projects across Harvard University for three months in the summer of 2001. The internships were sponsored by the Harvard Green Campus Initiative, in collaboration with…

  • Health

    How does the brain reinvent itself?

    In order for us to use our minds for memory, for learning, and so forth, our brains must continually reinvent themselves. How do they do it? A Harvard Medical School…

  • Health

    WHO report reviews world mental health care

    Since the mid-1970s, World Health Organization policies have encouraged integrating mental health services into primary care settings. But no one knows what, if anything, might be working to help those…

  • Science & Tech

    How media violence touches children

    Children and adolescents are consuming more television than ever before. The average 8- to 18-year-old spends nearly seven hours each day involved with some form of media. Kids are also…

  • Campus & Community

    Steven Hyman named Harvard provost

    Steven E. Hyman, former Professor of Psychiatry at Harvard and current Director of the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH), has been named Provost of the University, President Lawrence H. Summers announced today.

  • Campus & Community

    Science and spirituality: Good chemistry?

    Hundreds of scholars descended on the Memorial Church this week for a three-day conference on the intersection of science and religion that looked for evidence of god in places ranging from chimpanzees to the cosmos.

  • Campus & Community

    Art Museums establish Deknatel fund for modern art

    Over many years, the art museums at Harvard have benefited from the friendship of Fred and Virginia Deknatel, said James Cuno, director of the Harvard University Art Museums. With the establishment of this fund in their names, we will be able to honor their friendship and legacy of support for modern art at Harvard in…

  • Campus & Community

    Crimson crews stroke to victory at ‘Head’

    Call it a home field – or home river – advantage.

  • Campus & Community

    Bilingual education fires up Askwith Forum

    A battle over bilingual education raged Oct. 15 at the Graduate School of Educations (GSE) Askwith Education Forum. California businessman Ron Unz, a champion of abolishing bilingual education, squared off against the GSEs Catherine Snow, Henry Lee Shattuck Professor of Education and an expert on language and literacy development, in a heated discussion that pitted…

  • Campus & Community

    Anthrax toxin receptor discovered

    Researchers at Harvard Medical School and the University of Wisconsin Medical School have found the docking protein, or receptor, for anthrax toxin. The long-sought protein is thought to be the first point of contact between the toxin and the cell it will eventually destroy.