1908 – Born Oct. 15, in Iona Station, Ontario, Canada 1931 – Receives bachelor of science degree from University of Toronto (Ontario Agricultural College) Related links: • John Kenneth Galbraith…
Jay O. Light, an expert in finance and investment management and the Dwight P. Robinson Jr. Professor of Business Administration at Harvard Business School (HBS), will be the Schools next dean, President Lawrence H. Summers announced Monday (April 24).
Robert G. Stone Jr. 45, LL.D. 03, a pre-eminent and beloved figure in the Harvard community who served as trusted adviser and friend to three Harvard presidents as well as countless faculty, staff, and students for more than four decades, died on April 18. He was 83. The cause was complications following a stroke, according to the family.
At 2 in the morning of April 25, a female student (not affiliated with the University) met an unknown male in the fourth- floor lounge of a Lesley University dormitory. After a brief conversation with the individual, the student reported that the individual sexually assaulted her. The suspect is described as a light-skinned Hispanic male, approximately 20 years old, 5 foot 7 inches tall, 170 pounds, with dark hair and a fade haircut, and a pencil-thin moustache, beard, and goatee. The suspect, who also was wearing a blue shirt and blue jeans, had been seen earlier that evening in the lounge area and two nights prior. The incident is under active investigation by the Cambridge Police Department (CPD).
A memorial service for retired Harvard Divinity School (HDS) Professor William Robert Hutchison will be held at the Memorial Church tomorrow (April 28) at 2 p.m. An honorary associate and…
Following are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department for the week ending April 24. The official log is located at 1033 Massachusetts Ave., sixth floor, and is available online at http://www.hupd.harvard.edu/.
President Lawrence H. Summers will hold office hours for students in his Massachusetts Hall office on the following dates: Thursday, May 11, 4-5 p.m. Sign-up begins one hour earlier unless…
Michael Rosen, a scholar of European political philosophy with a consummate command of continental political thought from the 18th century to the present, has been appointed professor of government in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, effective July 1.
Three Harvard faculty members were recently named among the honorees of YWCA Bostons upcoming womens leadership event. Instructor of Public Health Practice in the Division of Public Health Practice at the Harvard School of Public Health Linda Clayton will be inducted to the Ys prestigious Academy of Women Achievers, while Edwin J. Furshpan, the Robert Henry Pfeiffer Professor of Neurobiology Emeritus, and David D. Potter, research professor of neurobiology, will receive the 2006 Racial Justice Award. The latter award is given annually to individuals who further the Ys goal of fighting for racial justice.
In recognition of their distinguished and continuing achievements in original research, six Harvard professors recently joined 66 other U.S. scientists and engineers to be elected members of the National Academy of Sciences (NAS). The election, held this week during the academys 142nd annual meeting, brings the total number of active members to 2,013.
William James Foundation awards student-led plan The William James Foundation recently named the Harvard student-led Fair Market Financial (FMF) business plan as one of its outstanding merit award winners in…
PBHA auction to benefit summer youth camps The Phillips Brooks House Association (PBHA) will hold its third annual auction to benefit its Summer Urban Program on May 3 from 5:30…
Out of more than 1,000 students in the Harvard class of 1952, four were African American. Contrast this with the 150 or so African-American students in the recently admitted class of 2010.
Nancy Bean dreamed of leaving the antiseptic middle-class suburb where she lived with her husband and three children and returning to the small Texas town of Tulia where she was raised. She wanted her kids to experience the slower, simpler life of home canning and quilting bees that she remembered from childhood, to know what it was like to live closer to the land, surrounded by a large extended family.
Geraldine Brooks, the Vera M. Schuyler Fellow at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, had been scheduled for several months to present her work-in-progress on April 19 to other fellows, the Harvard community, and the public. Then two days before her presentation, Brooks learned she had won the Pulitzer Prize for fiction for her novel March (Viking, 2005).
Harvard Assistant Professor of the History of Science Marwa Elshakry joined 19 other scholars nationwide to be named Carnegie Scholars this week by the Carnegie Corporation of New York.
The Woodberry Poetry Room in Lamont Library will be closed for extensive renovations from May 29 to Sept. 10, during which time the collection will not be available for use. The room will reopen Sept. 11 at 9 a.m. Please contact curator Don Share (via e-mail at share@fas.harvard.edu or phone at 617-495-2454) with any questions about the collection.
World-class professional tennis team the Boston Lobsters is gearing up for another season at Harvards Bright Hockey Center, scheduled for July 6-26. The home of the Lobsters has been modified to include a new cooling system and improved sight lines for a more intimate seating venue than seasons past. This season, special guests and live entertainment are also planned.
Joan Reede surveyed the scene as busload after busload of middle schoolers made their way into Harvard Medical Schools gleaming New Research Building. A staff member approached, leading a young girl. Id like to introduce you to someone, the staffer began, but Reede quickly said, Oh, I know her already. She wants to be a pediatrician.
It’s a devastating disease, changing behavior, causing uncontrolled movements, blindness, coma, and, finally, death. And we all have the makings of it in our heads. When it topples cows, it’s…
The winner of this year’s ES100-100hf senior engineering design project course competition aimed straight for the heart by recording an electrical “ballad.” The runners-up (a tie for second), meanwhile, worked…
John Wakeley is devising new ways to trace the evolutionary road taken by humans and the creatures with whom we share planet Earth by creating new models that examine how…
An invasive weed that has spread across much of the United States harms native maples, ashes, and other hardwood trees by releasing chemicals harmful to a soil fungus the trees…
At its 16th meeting of the year on April 26, the Faculty Council discussed scholarly publishing and a proposal to rename and establish new degrees in the Extension School. The…
April 9, 1968 – Assassinated civil-rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. is buried in Atlanta. At Harvard, Lowell Lecture Hall is the scene of a daylong program of speeches and…
The Harvard Alumni Association (HAA) has announced the recipients of the 2006 Harvard Medal: Chase N. Peterson 52, M.D. 56, Chet Stone III, and Sidney R. Knafel 52, M.B.A. 54.
The pressures of pride served a visiting Brown baseball team well in game two of Mondays (April 24) doubleheader. Facing elimination in the Red Rolfe Division title race – and carrying the fresh sting of dropping three straight against the Crimson by scores of 1-0, 8-4, and 5-2 – the Bears bucked the series trend with a 16-2 thrashing of their hosts in the fourth and final contest to avoid the sweep, and, most importantly, to stay mathematically alive in the hunt for the division title.
Bulldog track and fielders get past hosts A visiting Yale women’s track and field team captured 10 of 18 events this past Saturday (April 22) to take an 86-77 win…
Dancers leaping into the air, potters spinning their wheels, musicians playing religious to rock, and many other performance and visual artists representing the Harvard arts scene will soon take over various venues in and around campus, marking the arrival of Arts First, Harvards 14th annual arts festival.