All articles
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Science & Tech
Study finds parents of chronically ill children avoid switching to HMOs
The incentive to switch health plans is usually a lower cost to the patient. So if parents of chronically ill children want to retain their old health plans instead of…
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Science & Tech
Some video games contain more violence than parents expect
If a video game is rated “E” for “suitable for everyone,” that is supposed to be a signal to parents that the game is acceptable for their children. But a…
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Campus & Community
New way to “see” DNA
Extraordinarily tiny holes are behind a whole new way to make structures only a few dozen atoms in size.
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Science & Tech
Stellar apocalypse yields first evidence of water-bearing worlds beyond our solar system
The first evidence that planetary systems beyond our own contain water, a molecule that is an essential ingredient for known forms of life, was discovered recently by using the Submillimeter…
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Science & Tech
Dating violence linked with teen pregnancy, suicide attempts
About one in five girls experience physical or sexual dating violence, according to a new study by researchers from the Harvard School of Public Health, the Boston University School of…
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Science & Tech
Preventing cervical cancer in developing nations
Cervical cancer kills approximately 190,000 women each year, most of them in developing nations. It is the third most common cancer world wide. Women who live in more affluent nations…
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Campus & Community
Women on the move
Since a Harvard graduate student published his Ph.D. thesis three years ago, evidence has been accumulating that women are the real movers of society, spreading their genes as they married and moved in with their husband’s families.
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Campus & Community
Haley Surti ’01, dies in accident
Haley Surti 01, died in a bus accident in Peru, on June 12. Haley was a resident of Mather House, a concentrator in biochemistry, a writer/researcher for Lets Go, and a member of the South Asian Association (choreographer and dancer), the Mather House Chamber Music Society (violinist), Kuumba, and the womens lacrosse team. She was…
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Campus & Community
This month in Harvard history
In July 2, 1641 – President Henry Dunster marries Elizabeth Glover, widow of Cambridge clergyman Jose Glover, who owned the English colonies first printing press. (In 1640, this machine had produced the Bay Psalm Book, the first book published by English colonists in America.) By 1646, the press is installed in the Presidents Lodging. Sometime…
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Campus & Community
A totem pole comes home
A century after it was given to Harvard by railroad tycoon Edward Harriman, the Tlingit totem pole that formerly stood guard in the Peabody Museums Hall of the North American Indian is returning to its original home on the coast of Alaska.
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Campus & Community
Strange sights of summer
Since summers lease hath all too short a date, why not make the most of it by catching a performance of Shakespeares A Midsummer Nights Dream, staged in the open air of Adams House courtyard?
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Campus & Community
Harvard’s band Pops at Hatch Shell
Under the artistic direction of Thomas Everett, the Harvard Summer Pops Band will present its annual concert at the Hatch Shell on Saturday, Aug. 4, at 7 p.m. Bassoonist Dale Clark will be the guest soloist. The Harvard Summer Pops Band will also perform in Harvard Yard on Wednesday, Aug. 1, at 4 p.m.
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Campus & Community
KSG Kuwait Program announces grant awards
The Kuwait Program at the Kennedy School of Government (KSG) held its first Executive Program in Kuwait on Global Challenges and Security in the Gulf from June 11-13. The Kuwait Foundation for the Advancement of Sciences, the sponsor of KSGs Kuwait Program, hosted the three-day seminar. Twenty-nine senior executives from the government, military, and private…
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Campus & Community
Taylor family endows award for fairness
In an effort to encourage fairness in newspaper journalism and honor an exemplary example of fairness in news coverage, the former managers of The Boston Globe have announced the establishment of the Taylor Family Award for Fairness in Newspapers. The Nieman Foundation for Journalism at Harvard will administer the award.
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Campus & Community
HLS establishes Bob Barker endowment
Harvard Law School (HLS) has received a $500,000 gift to establish the Bob Barker Endowment Fund for the Study of Animal Rights. The fund will support teaching and research at HLS in the emerging field of animal rights law. The income generated by the gift will fund periodic courses and seminars at HLS on animal…
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Campus & Community
The science of teaching science
Last Thursday, on a day as beautiful as any this summer has offered, 14 Boston-area high school science teachers sat in the dark learning about mechanisms of cholesterol homeostasis. Later that day, they watched blood clot.
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Campus & Community
Area teens work as interns at Peabody
The Harvard Museum of Natural History (HMNH) and the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology welcomed the Kush Club Summer Program on Tuesday, July 10. A youth organization established in 1989, the Kush Club is dedicated to studying and promoting public awareness about the history, culture, and artistic achievements of Africa in antiquity.
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Campus & Community
Fellowship tackles Latin American, Caribbean poverty
The W.K. Kellogg Foundation (WKKF) has announced a $3.6 million dollar grant to LASPAU: Academic and Professional Programs for the Americas to administer a new program – the Leadership Fellowship Program for Latin America and the Caribbean. The five-year grant is designed to train up to 50 fellows through short-term, masters, and doctoral degree programs…
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Campus & Community
Warm, fuzzy, weird, funny: The Museum(s) of Natural History spin some tall tales
Carl Hagen regretted that he had but one life to give for his – butterfly. George Washington regretted that his pheasants didnt last longer, and Mugger, well, Mugger was an enormous saltwater crocodile and if he regretted anything at all, it was probably eating the horse that brought about his doom.
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Campus & Community
Widener scaffolding erected
In preparation for Phase 2 of the Widener Library renovation project, scheduled to begin this fall, scaffolding has been erected temporarily in the librarys lobby to aid architects in gathering preliminary information pertaining to the original structure of the building.
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Campus & Community
Study on state of housing released
The State of the Nations Housing: 2001, released last month by Harvards Joint Center for Housing Studies, found that despite the weakening economy, home sales entered the year at near record levels prices and rents continued to climb and residential fixed investment in 2000 was off a mere half percent.
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Campus & Community
School segregation on the rise
Almost a half century after the U.S. Supreme Court concluded that Southern school segregation was unconstitutional and inherently unequal, a new study from The Civil Rights Project at Harvard shows that segregation continued to intensify throughout the 1990s. The study, Schools More Separate: Consequences of a Decade of Resegregation, by Professor of Education and Social…
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Campus & Community
Filmmaker Richard Rogers dies at 57
Richard P. Rogers, director of the Film Study Center and senior lecturer in Visual and Environmental Studies (VES), died Saturday, July 14, in his home in Wainscott, N.Y. The cause of death was metastasized melanoma. Rogers was 57.
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Campus & Community
GSD announces Fulbright Exchange grant winners
Five students in the Graduate School of Design (GSD) received Fulbright Cultural Exchange Grants. The 2000-01 winners were announced at the GSD Commencement in June. The following list of grant recipients, which includes their nation of study and project title, reflects this years diversity of interests, skills, and backgrounds.
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Campus & Community
Center for European Studies joins scholarly reunion in Dresden
The crimson Veritas banner flew alongside the black, gold, and red German flag when summer arrived in downtown Dresden this June, as more than 150 U.S. and German scholars celebrated 35 years of the study of Germany and Europe at Harvards Minda de Gunzburg Center for European Studies (CES).
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Campus & Community
NCAA Women’s Basketball Final Four is coming to Harvard
The NCAA Division I Womens Basketball Committee has selected Indianapolis, Boston, and Cleveland as the sites for the 2005, 2006, and 2007 NCAA Womens Final Fours, respectively.
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Campus & Community
Pushing the envelope
They stand in mammoth clusters along the streets of nearly every major city they loom like glistening monoliths at the edge of suburban highways they are omnipresent – the huge glass boxes in which the worlds business is transacted.
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Campus & Community
Law School launches digital divide policy initiative
Harvard Law Schools Berkman Center for Internet & Society has announced a new project to create public policies that support digital entrepreneurship. The project, Open Economies, will support developing nations seeking to embrace digital technology and digitally enabled entrepreneurship as a means to economic development.
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Campus & Community
Louise Richardson named Radcliffe’s executive dean
Political scientist Louise Richardson, an associate professor of government at Harvard University and the head tutor in the Universitys department of government, has been appointed executive dean of the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study. Richardson assumed her new responsibilities on July 2.