Campus & Community
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5 from Harvard named Marshall Scholars
Awards for 4 students, 1 alumna — more than any other institution — support graduate studies in the United Kingdom
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‘Our students are seeking not just to coexist, but to understand’
8 projects win Building Bridges grants to spark constructive dialogue on campus
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Roy Parviz Mottahedeh, 84
At a meeting of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences on Dec. 2, 2025, the following tribute to the life and service of the late Roy Parviz Mottahedeh was spread upon the permanent records of the Faculty.
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Karel Frederik Liem, 73
At a meeting of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences on Dec. 2, 2025, the following tribute to the life and service of the late Karel Frederik Liem was spread upon the permanent records of the Faculty.
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‘Goodnight, sweet prince’
New holiday film reimagines couple’s searing grief over death of young son, how it inspired creation of ‘Hamlet’
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On the sea or in the lab, Olivia Hogan-Lopez knows the value of perseverance
Senior is researching how PFAS chemicals impact humans and the environment
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Extraordinary service
A special kind of leadership, embodied in the selfless service of five Harvard Business School (HBS) students – Michael Arlotto and Jill Szuchmacher, Kathleen Cassie Kearney, Avichai Avi Kremer, Yael Gayle Tzemach – is being recognized this week with the 2006 Deans Award, one of HBSs highest honors.
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Hoopes winners announced; Fay Prize winner among them
More than 70 undergraduates have won the Thomas T. Hoopes Prize for outstanding scholarly work or research. The prize is funded by the estate of Thomas T. Hoopes 19. The prize winners, including their advisers, are as follows:
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Radcliffe Institute names ’06 alumnae award winners
The Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard University has named 12 recipients of its annual alumnae awards. Among others, this years honorees include Susan Faludi 81, a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and author Amy Gutmann 76, president of the University of Pennsylvania and Elaine Pagels 70, author of Beyond Belief: The Secret Gospel of Thomas and The Gnostic Gospels. The awards will be presented and the recipients will speak at the Radcliffe Awards Symposium, Women, Power, and Change: How Far Have We Come? to be held Friday (June 9) at Agassiz Theatre, 10 Garden St., Cambridge, Mass., from 10:15 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.
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Greenhouse awarded Radcliffe Medal
Linda Greenhouse, longtime Supreme Court correspondent for The New York Times and graduate of Radcliffe and Harvard College, will receive the 2006 Radcliffe Institute Medal.
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Old friends, old soldiers gather for 55th reunion
Cy Devery caught up with two old friends June 6 when he visited the Collings Foundation in Stow, Mass. – the AT-6F Texan and the T-33 Shooting Star.
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Graduates will commence to brazen peals
A joyous peal of bells will ring throughout Cambridge today (June 8). In celebration of the city of Cambridge and of the countrys oldest university – and of our earlier history when bells of varying tones summoned us from sleep to prayer, work, or study – this ancient yet new sound will fill Harvard Square and the surrounding area with music when a number of neighboring churches and institutions ring out at the conclusion of Harvards 355th Commencement Exercises.
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Speaking in tongues, modern and ancient
Joy Seth Hurd IV speaks fluent Latin. Martin Spencer Bell has his sights set on being a trial lawyer. Liz Carlisle is a country singer/songwriter with an album on record store shelves. Though these graduating Harvard students may seem very different, they all have something in common: On Commencement Day, each will take the stage of Tercentenary Theatre and deliver the speech of a lifetime to an international audience of more than 30,000.
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Wilentz, Alexander advise, inspire
American democracy is not a static, unchanging phenomenon, but rather an ongoing argument said Sean Wilentz, this years Phi Beta Kappa orator.
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ROTC faces down rough weather
Normally, ROTC cadets are officially sworn in to the U.S. armed services in front of the statue of John Harvard before moving on to a more formal ceremony in the Yards Tercentenary Theatre. But the 2006 class gathered instead under the tent covering the theater stage, looking out onto a sea of puddled white chairs as the bronze figure in front of University Hall sat alone and drenched hoping, perhaps, for a sunnier afternoon.
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Sarah Billmeier: Uphill racer
Sarah Billmeier got off to a good start in competitive skiing, winning a gold medal in a world championship race in France at age 14. By the time she was 25, she was a six-time world champion and had won 13 Olympic medals. In 2002, she put aside her skis to enter Harvard Medical School. Today (June 8), four days before her 29th birthday, she becomes Sarah Billmeier, M.D., with the intent of specializing in surgery.
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Faith healing
Watching her grandfather struggle with diabetes late in life, Enesha Cobb became convinced that the medical profession can do better.
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‘I’m not going to stop just because I have a degree’
When Elizabeth McNeil was asked to suggest a place to meet to talk about what its like to be graduating from the Harvard Extension School at 82, she had an immediate answer: the Everett Public Library.
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From deep springs
Down to earth is the phrase that is probably most often used to describe David Wax. Most people dont mean it literally, but considering Waxs background, it is particularly apt.
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The meaning of ‘bootstrap’
Like many young New Yorkers, Erby Mitchell grew up with hoop dreams.
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Conceptual efficiency expert
The tour begins in the research and development area. Pinned to the wall, a large sheet of white graph paper is inscribed with neatly arranged ink drawings of … well, things. Some look like scissors or Swiss Army knives, others like deformed sandwich cookies or mutant hotdogs.
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Leader of the opposition
Elias Mudzuri knows he has a fight ahead of him when he returns to his native Zimbabwe after graduating from the John F. Kennedy School of Government in June.
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Keeper of the net
Hockey goaltenders tend to be a stoic bunch. When not deflecting whats thrown at them, this rare breed of athlete sits nestled in a cage for 60 minutes at a time, waiting. Even their massive padding and that plain and frightful mask lend a level of anonymity and coolness absent in high-scoring, fist-pumping forwards.
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Training smart
For your average college senior, 20 years is literally a lifetime. Its also about the same amount of time it took fifth-generation Montanan David Cromwell 06 of the Harvard swimming and diving team to realize he actually enjoyed the aquatic life.
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‘Toiling upward in the night’
Sacasha Brown was living in New York City when terrorists crashed two passenger jets into the twin towers of the World Trade Center.
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Radcliffe recognizes its 2006-07 fellows
Drew Gilpin Faust, dean of the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study and Lincoln Professor of History in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, has announced the names of 37 women and 13 men selected to be 2006 – 07 Radcliffe Fellows. At the institute, the fellows – among them 16 humanists, 14 scientists, 10 creative artists, and 10 social scientists, working on projects ranging from a study of integrated intelligence in robotics to a biography of Nathaniel Hawthornes sister – will work individually and across disciplines on projects chosen for both quality and long-term impact.
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Extension School recognizes its students, faculty for their outstanding work throughout the year
This year the Harvard Extension School will have three Commencement ceremonies: one for undergraduate degrees, one for graduate degrees, and one for graduate certificates. The Undergraduate Commencement Speaker Award goes to Siza Mtimbiri, A.L.B., who will speak on the topic A Walk to Remember. The Graduate Commencement Speaker Award goes to Daniel E. Levenson, A.L.M., whose talk is titled The Transforming Extension School Experience. The main address at the graduate certificate ceremonies, titled The Road to Success, will be delivered by Myra S. White, research associate in psychiatry, Harvard Medical School, and chief executive officer, Work Intelligence Inc.
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355th Commencement: Harvard confers 6,706 degrees and 248 certificates
Today the University awarded a total of 6,706 degrees and 248 certificates. A breakdown of the degrees by schools and programs follows. Harvard College granted a total of 1,641 degrees.
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Summers lays foundation for renewal and expansion
Lawrence H. Summers announced on Feb. 21, 2006, that he will conclude his tenure as president of Harvard at the end of the 2005-2006 academic year. After a period of sabbatical and reflection, he will return to teaching and research as a University Professor.
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President Summers is remembered by many…
Lawrence H. Summers announced on Feb. 21, 2006, that he will conclude his tenure as president of Harvard at the end of the 2005-2006 academic year. After a period of sabbatical and reflection, he will return to teaching and research as a University Professor.
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President Summers’ tenure: A timeline
Lawrence H. Summers announced on Feb. 21, 2006, that he will conclude his tenure as president of Harvard at the end of the 2005-2006 academic year. After a period of sabbatical and reflection, he will return to teaching and research as a University Professor.
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Figs likely first domesticated crop
Archaeobotanists have found evidence that the dawn of agriculture may have come with the domestication of fig trees in the Near East some 11,400 years ago, roughly 1,000 years before…
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This month in Harvard history
June 19, 1858 – At the Boston City Regatta, crimson finds its first use as a Harvard color when members of a Harvard boat club seek to distinguish themselves among…
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Howard Hughes Medical Institute awards $1.5 million for science programs
The Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI) has named Harvard one of 50 universities nationwide to receive grants ranging from $1.5 million to $2.2 million for bold and innovative undergraduate science education programs.
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Medalists honored for lifetime work by GSAS
An ethicist whose work has had a major impact on medical policy, an astronomer who uncovers secrets of distant galaxies, a Nobel Prize-winning economist who has proposed challenging theories of economic growth, and a writer whose many books have established him as the foremost historian of California received the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences Centennial Medal on Wednesday (June 7) at the Harvard Faculty Club.
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Manly break or holiday in ‘Wonderland’?
With their Commencement, students will go forth to press on to higher and better things – at all events, to other things, as Nathaniel Hawthorne once put it. But students arent the only ones planning new projects or looking forward to relaxing in a shady hammock – or both, simultaneously. Professors, too, are embarking on fresh adventures, as the following brief interviews show.