Campus & Community

All Campus & Community

  • Applications to Harvard College stabilize

    Applications have leveled off after five consecutive years of record numbers. A total of 34,285 applications were received, a dip from last year’s record 34,950. Two years ago, 30,489 applied; 10 years ago, 18,932 applied.

  • Faculty Council meeting held Jan. 25

    At the Jan. 25 meeting of the Faculty Council, its members approved the 2012-13 faculty meeting schedule.

  • The right way to report wrongdoing

    The University’s comprehensive new policy on whistleblowing aims to make reporting legal or ethical breaches both safe and easy for all members of the Harvard community.

  • Helen Whitney to deliver Noble Lectures

    Award-winning producer, director, and writer Helen Whitney will deliver this year’s William Belden Noble Lectures at the Memorial Church.

  • Straus Center curator recognized

    Francesca Bewer has won the 2012 College Art Association/Heritage Preservation Award for Distinction in Scholarship and Conservation.

  • Shorenstein Center welcomes six spring fellows

    Six new fellows will join the Shorenstein Center this spring.

  • Jason Segel named Man of the Year

    The Hasty Pudding Theatricals has named Jason Segel as its 2012 Man of the Year.

  • Danes named Woman of the Year

    The Hasty Pudding Theatricals names actress Claire Danes as its 2012 Woman of the Year.

  • NAS honors four faculty

    Michael J. Hopkins, Jonathan B. Losos, Andrew H. Knoll, and Jason P. Mitchell have been honored by the National Academy of Sciences for their extraordinary scientific achievements.

  • Great Teachers trailer

    A preview of Harvard University’s “Great Teachers” series which will be launched in March of 2012.

  • Harvard Allston Partnership Fund awards $100,000 to Allston-Brighton nonprofits

    The Harvard Allston Partnership Fund (HAPF) today announced that nine local nonprofits will receive grants totaling $100,000 to support programs in the Allston-Brighton community. The HAPF recognizes and supports organizations that provide Allston-Brighton residents with youth enrichment, educational programs, and engaging activities for the elderly and people with disabilities.

  • Breaking away

    Harvard College officials applaud students who choose to spend Winter Break away from campus, where they can recharge and reconnect with loved ones. Officials say that the “nothing” that undergraduates often think they’re doing — sleeping, eating well, and tending to relationships — is actually vital for academic success, and for physical and mental health.

  • Land-use law pioneer, Charles M. Haar, 91

    Louis D. Brandeis Professor of Law Emeritus Charles M. Haar ’48, a pioneer in land-use law whose scholarship focused on laws and institutions of city planning, urban development, and environmental issues, died on Jan. 10.

  • March memorial for Norman Ramsey

    The Department of Physics will host a memorial ceremony for Nobel laureate and former physics professor Norman Ramsey.

  • Men’s basketball on a roll

    Coach Tommy Amaker and his Harvard men’s basketball team began the second half of their breakout season with a 15-2 record and the University’s first national ranking in the sport. The passionate group of young men, led by captains Keith Wright ’12 and Oliver McNally ’12, has been playing in front of boisterous, sell-out crowds in Lavietes Pavilion.

  • We Are Harvard

  • Harvard opens outdoor rink

    As part of the University’s yearlong 375th anniversary celebration, Harvard launched Harvard Skate Jan. 17.

  • HAA to open April 1 election

    This spring, alumni can vote for a new group of Harvard Overseers and elected directors for the Harvard Alumni Association board.

  • IOP announces spring fellows

    Harvard Kennedy School’s Institute of Politics has announced the selection of an experienced group of individuals for resident and visiting fellowships this spring.

  • Professor Charles Lieber receives Israel’s Wolf Prize

    Charles Lieber, the Mark Hyman Jr. Professor of Chemistry, was recently awarded Israel’s prestigious Wolf Prize.

  • The Civil War’s allures, and horrors

    People are “powerfully attracted to war,” Harvard President Drew Faust told a crowd at the Cambridge Public Library on Jan. 10, and no conflict draws as much continuing interest and controversy in America as its own Civil War. The historian’s job is to balance that allure with a search for the truth, Faust said.

  • An adviser for global strategy

    Harvard President Drew Faust names Krishna G. Palepu, Ross Graham Walker Professor of Business Administration and senior associate dean for international development at Harvard Business School, to the new post of senior adviser to the president for global strategy.

  • Harvard tops Dartmouth, 63-47

    The Crimson toppled Dartmouth and next take on George Washington University in a sold-out game on Jan. 14.

  • Music scholar, John Milton Ward, 94

    John Milton Ward, Harvard’s William Powell Mason Professor of Music from 1961 to 1985, died quietly at home in Cambridge on Dec. 12. He was 94 years old.

  • Forbes honors student innovators

    Jessica Choi ’12 and Dalumuzi Mhlanga ’13 have been named one of three winners of the 2011 College Social Innovator Contest — hosted jointly by the Harvard College Social Innovation Collaborative and the “Common Good” column at Forbes.com.

  • Harvard launches city lecture series

    Harvard is launching a lecture and program series in the Boston and Cambridge public libraries. President Drew Faust will give the inaugural address of the new John Harvard Book Celebration on Jan. 10.

  • Former A.R.T. resident director dies

    David Wheeler, longtime resident director and later associate artist of the American Repertory Theater, died Jan. 4.

  • Calming influence

    Stressbusters brings free back rubs to students who have neither the time nor the money for professional massage — or who simply wake up with stiff necks after long hours of study. The next Stressbusters training will be in February.

  • Preserving affordable housing

    Twenty-five affordable apartments in Harvard Square’s Craigie Arms Apartments will remain affordable for at least 50 additional years after the city of Cambridge, Harvard University, and the nonprofit Homeowners Rehab Inc. (HRI) put together a creative plan to preserve the affordability of these units through HRI’s purchase of the 50-unit Craigie Arms building.

  • The defense of Ebenezer

    A Winthrop House tradition retakes the airwaves, as WHRB rebroadcasts professor’s defense of Christmas anti-hero Ebenezer Scrooge.