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  • Campus & Community

    Cabot Fellowships awarded to four

    The annual Walter Channing Cabot Fellowships have been conferred on four members of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences. The recipients are: Mario Davidovsky, Fanny P. Mason Professor of Music Peter Galison, Mallinckrodt Professor of the History of Science and of Physics Katharine Park, Samuel Zemurray Jr. and Doris Zemurray Stone Radcliffe Professor of the…

  • Campus & Community

    The Big Picture

    “This is something!” Don Share proclaims, rising out of his seat and bustling over to the shelves by his desk. He picks up a can – it looks like a…

  • Campus & Community

    Thinking disease:

    By any account, the 19th century cholera epidemics were horrible. Rumor and ignorance fed fear of a disease that could strike in the afternoon and kill by bedtime. In Charles Rosenbergs eyes, though, the epidemics are also a lens through which to view American society.

  • Campus & Community

    Ramakrishnan, 64, senior associate at HIID

    Subramaniam Ramakrishnan, senior associate at the Harvard Institute for International Development (HIID), died Feb. 7. Ramakrishnans relationship with the University started in 1975, when he was awarded a fellowship at the Kennedy School. From 1982 to 1999, he worked as a senior associate at HIID. Ramakrishnan had directed and taught in HIID workshops for government…

  • Campus & Community

    Quine service set for March 2

    A memorial service will be held on March 2 for philosopher and logician Willard Van Orman Quine.

  • Campus & Community

    Police Reports

    Following are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department (HUPD) for the week ending Feb. 10. The official log is located at Police Headquarters, 29 Garden…

  • Campus & Community

    William Olney, 76, was a University fundraiser

    William Olney, a former fundraiser for Harvard University, died Jan. 3 in his home in Westwood, Mass. He was 76. From 1962 until his retirement in 1988, Olney was the…

  • Campus & Community

    In Brief

    East Asian Legal Studies accepting submissions The East Asian Legal Studies (EALS) program of the Harvard Law School (HLS) will award the Yong K. Kim ’95 Memorial Prize to the…

  • Campus & Community

    De Klerk has a ‘clear conscience’

    Former South African President Frederik Willem de Klerk made a case for international protection of minority groups to a receptive but sometimes skeptical audience that questioned his role in the abuses of South Africas discarded apartheid past.

  • Campus & Community

    Anthony Hopkins hams it up for Hasty

    The stocky, shifty-eyed man wearing a tuxedo and a sly smile claimed it was a case of mistaken identity, but the audience knew better.

  • Campus & Community

    Facing the challenges of tomorrow (page 5)

    Facing the challenges of tomorrow Jeremy R. Knowles, Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences prevPage 5 Financial Status The new chart of accounts allows me to report the…

  • Campus & Community

    Facing the challenges of tomorrow (page 4)

    Facing the challenges of tomorrow Jeremy R. Knowles, Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences prevPage 4next The Library Two years ago, I invited the Standing Committee of the…

  • Campus & Community

    Harvard Gazette: Facing the challenges of tomorrow (page 3)

    Facing the challenges of tomorrow Jeremy R. Knowles, Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences prevPage 3next The Graduate School Admissions. The number of applicants rose again this year,…

  • Campus & Community

    Emily Vermeule, 72, was world-renowned classicist

    Emily Dickinson Townsend Vermeule, distinguished archaeologist, classicist, and art historian, died last Tuesday, Feb. 6 at her home in Cambridge, Mass. She was 72. Vermeule was professor emerita at Harvard University.

  • Campus & Community

    Pregnancy forum delivers the goods

    Almost two years ago, senior Marta Szabo found out she was pregnant just weeks before her spring exams, and although Szabo is now successfully juggling classes and diapers, she said it hasnt been easy. So with the hope of making the experience of unexpected pregnancy easier for future students, Szabo joined a group of six…

  • Campus & Community

    Stars come out for KSG auction

    Lunch with Sen. John McCain have a shot at stardom with a nonspeaking, walk-on role in the hit TV show Dharma &amp Greg tour the set of ER or The West Wing get into the action as a ballboy or ballgirl at a Celtics game shadow CNN correspondent William Schneider for a day.

  • Campus & Community

    This month in Harvard history

    February 1949 – As a gesture of sympathetic distress over a Jan. 26 fire that destroys 11 of 12 great murals in the Gondo (Golden Hall) of Horyu-ji Monastery at…

  • Campus & Community

    Grants and awards information session

    The Stride Rite Post-Graduate Public Service Grants support involvement in public service projects during the year following graduation. Graduating seniors are eligible to apply and receive grants between $10,000 and $25,000. Funded programs are to be full time and community-focused

  • Campus & Community

    Special notice regarding tickets to June 7 Commencement Exercises

    Morning Exercises To accommodate the increasing number of those wishing to attend Harvard’s Commencement Exercises, the following guidelines are proposed to facilitate admission into Tercentenary Theatre on Commencement Morning: Degree…

  • Campus & Community

    Scholarships for Study or Research in China

    Scholarships for one academic year of study or research in China are made possible through an agreement between the Ministry of Education of the Peoples Republic of China and Harvard University. For academic year 2001-2002, five full scholarships (covering tuition, housing, health insurance and books) and ten partial scholarships (covering tuition only) will be offered…

  • Campus & Community

    Brain disease slowed:

    Cells from fetuses implanted in the brains of a dozen people with Huntingtons disease improved the ability of nine of them to control their movements and has, perhaps, postponed their deaths.

  • Campus & Community

    Students speak out at hate crime forum

    When a gay tutor at Mather House opted to leave Harvard after becoming a target of harassment last year, his friend Serre-Yu Wong 01 was devastated. That was a sad moment for our community because we couldnt come together enough for him, in support of him.

  • Science & Tech

    Charles Rosenberg looks at changing perceptions of illness

    In Charles Rosenberg’s eyes, epidemics tell us a great deal about American society. Rosenberg, considered by many to be the nation’s pre-eminent medical historian, was recently named Professor of the…

  • Health

    Increased consumption of soda promotes childhood obesity

    Soft drinks are currently the leading source of added sugars in the daily diet of young Americans. Now, researchers have conducted the first long-term study to examine soda consumption and…

  • Health

    Increased fruit and vegetable consumption does not reduce risk of breast cancer

    A recent Harvard study examined the association between fruit and vegetable consumption and breast cancer. The researchers drew participants from eight separate studies that spanned four countries and involved more…

  • Health

    Fat cells tied to whole-body insulin resistance

    Research done by Barbara Kahn, professor of medicine at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, and colleagues now shows that glucose uptake by fatty tissue is important for maintaining the body’s…

  • Health

    Studies show new players and patterns in vertebrate heart development

    Cell biologists have identified proteins capable of promoting heart development — at least in frogs and birds. They report that the proteins Dkk1 and Crescent, which inhibit regulatory proteins of…

  • Health

    Surprise route found for spread of breast cancer

    Cancer cells are thought to enter the lymph nodes through the lymphatic system — a multipurpose welter of vessels — but how the cells actually make their way out of…

  • Health

    Direct damage from radiation may be passed to neighboring cells

    Cells communicate, organize, share resources, and form direct connections with one another. They also are affected by damage to their neighbors. Research led by John Little of the Harvard School…

  • Health

    Cloak partly lifted on tiny Chlamydia

    The Boston Public Health Commission released 1999 statistics showing 2 percent of the city’s 15- to 19-year-olds have chlamydia. Boston’s minority girls were reported to have infection rates of almost…