All articles


  • 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.

  • 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.

  • 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.

  • 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…

  • 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.

  • 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.

  • 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).

  • 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.

  • 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.

  • Campus & Community

    Law School launches digital divide policy initiative

    Harvard Law Schools Berkman Center for Internet &amp 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.

  • 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.

  • Campus & Community

    Cultivating leadership, supporting change

    With barely a week of summer vacation behind them, about 40 Boston Public School teachers and administrators returned to work, rolling up their sleeves June 28 and 29 at the Boston-Harvard Leadership Development Initiative summer institute at the Faculty Club.

  • Campus & Community

    Unique film of Impressionist Renoir at work is found at Department of Comparative Literature

    For 44 years a small disc-shaped metal canister rested in a closet at the Comparative Literature Departments office in Boylston Hall. Nobody opened it. Nobody knew what it was.

  • Campus & Community

    Newsmakers

    Add bold here Caine honored for drug abuse research

  • Campus & Community

    Harvard Heroes hailed at fete

    With a trumpets fanfare, a custom-made video, the gracious words of outgoing President Neil L. Rudenstine, and a catered bash with a live band, Harvard honored its heroes on June 13 in Sanders Theatre.

  • Campus & Community

    Albert Szabo, Artist

    If you watch carefully, you can see the Earth move, says Albert Szabo, pointing to a rainbow sparkling on the back of a black leather chair. As the Earth rotates, he explains, sunlight shining through the prisms he has fastened to the window cause bands of colored light to migrate around the room.

  • Campus & Community

    Filmmaker immortalizes ‘immortal’ cells

    On Oct. 4, 1951, Henrietta Lacks died of cervical cancer at Johns Hopkins University Hospital in Baltimore.

  • Campus & Community

    A presidential welcome

    July 2, Lawrence H. Summers first full day on the job, greeted Harvards 27th president with a mix of ordinary tasks, celebratory events, and plenty of hard work.

  • Campus & Community

    Suspect sought for attempted rape

    One of nature’s best shows features the signals that fireflies exchange as they search for mates on warm summer nights. Few people can watch it without wondering how the little bugs turn their belly lanterns on and off so quickly.

  • Campus & Community

    Police Reports

    Following are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department (HUPD) for the weeks ending June 16, June 23, June 30, July 7, and July 14. The official log is located at Police Headquarters, 29 Garden St.

  • Campus & Community

    University implements job reclassification

    On Monday, July 16, Associate Vice President for Human Resources Polly Price and Vice President and General Counsel Anne Taylor released a statement to the University Community concerning the reclassification of certain jobs in beginning administrative and professional grades that would make the positions eligible for overtime pay. The statement explains why the reclassification is…

  • Campus & Community

    Diabetes cure may reduce need for embryo cells

    The permanent reversal of Type 1 diabetes in mice may end the wrenching debate over harvesting stem cells from the unborn to treat adult diseases. Researchers at Harvard Medical School killed cells responsible for the diabetes, then the animals’ adult stem cells took over and regenerated missing cells needed to produce insulin and eliminate the…

  • Science & Tech

    The skin’s the thing for conserving a building’s energy

    It has been estimated that a third of the world’s energy is consumed by buildings, a third by transportation, and a third by industry. With gasoline prices rising and electrical…

  • Science & Tech

    New way to ‘see’ DNA

    Research by Harvard scientists was driven by the need to make extremely small holes that mimic the pores in human cells through which different molecules must pass to keep the…

  • Health

    Adult stem cells effect a cure

    Using stem cells from the unborn to treat adult diseases has created an anguished public debate. Now research news from Harvard Medical School scientists may help to end that debate…

  • Health

    Deadliest form of malaria is younger than previously believed

    Malaria kills more people than any other communicable disease except for tuberculosis. It is the world’s most serious parasitic tropical disease, resulting in 1 million to 3 million deaths annually.…

  • Science & Tech

    School segregation on the rise despite growing diversity

    Nearly 50 years after the U.S. Supreme Court declared Southern segregated schools to be unconstitutional, resegregation is happening again. And it is occurring despite the nation’s growing diversity. According to…

  • Science & Tech

    New report highlights safe, secure method for managing spent nuclear fuel

    A joint Harvard University/University of Tokyo team of nuclear energy, nonproliferation, and waste management experts concludes in a new study that technologies are available to store spent nuclear fuel from…

  • Health

    An alternate take on Alzheimer’s

    Much of Alzheimer’s research has focused on the role of a protein, amyloid-beta, found at high levels in the brains of Alzheimer’s patients and which coagulates into plaques. Researcher Ashley…

  • Science & Tech

    No-fault compensation for medical injury proposed

    Three jumbo jets filled with patients crashing every two days — that’s the analogy for the number of patients estimated to die annually from medical injury in the U.S. A…