Campus & Community

All Campus & Community

  • Suicides are down, researchers say

    The suicide rate among men and women ages 18 to 54 years fell 6 percent since 1990. In 1990-92, the rate was approximately 15 out of every 100,000 adults. It…

  • HSPH joins battle over America’s waistline

    The Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) weighed in on the battle over America’s bulging middle Thursday (May 26), with a panel of health experts saying a government study showing…

  • Paradisaical

    A month of rain has rendered the Yard a glowing paradise of greenery.

  • KSG students help a city balance books

    When Bryan Richardson signed up for a lecture course on public finance at the Kennedy School of Government last fall, he never expected to be earning his grade by hobnobbing with urban police officers. This material can be kind of dry in the classroom, the 26-year-old from Tulsa, Okla., recalled. We all hoped to apply what we were learning.

  • This month in Harvard history

    June 19, 1638 – Shortly before this date, Nathaniel Eaton, first Master of the College, moves with his family from Charlestown into a house in the Yard. By Sept. 17,…

  • Police reports

    Following are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department for the week ending May 30. The official log is located at 1033 Massachusetts Ave., sixth floor, and is available online at http://www.hupd.harvard.edu/.

  • Chemist, card shark Liu takes off

    In some corners of Las Vegas, Harvard chemist David Liu is viewed as a dangerous man.

  • Bell ringing will accompany Commencement

    A peal of bells will ring throughout Cambridge next week, on Thursday (June 9). For the 17th consecutive year, a number of neighboring churches and institutions will ring their bells in celebration of the City of Cambridge and of Harvards 354th Commencement Exercises.

  • Fay Prize awarded

    Harvard University seniors Christopher D. Golden, an environmental conservation concentrator Liora Russman Halperin, a history and Near Eastern languages and civilizations concentrator and Peter McMurray, a Slavic studies and classics concentrator, are the winners of the 2005 Captain Jonathan Fay Prize, which is awarded by the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study. Radcliffe Institute Dean Drew Gilpin Faust announced the winners – who will graduate from Harvard with bachelors degrees on June 9 – at the Radcliffe Institutes annual Strawberry Tea on Wednesday (June 1).

  • Podhoretz prizewinners are named

    The Center for Jewish Studies at Harvard University has announced the recipients of the 2005 Norman Podhoretz Prize in Jewish Studies and the 2005 Selma and Lewis Weinstein Prize in Jewish Studies.

  • Planners chart options for Harvard in Allston

    The planning firm Cooper, Robertson and Partners has prepared an interim report for the Harvard community that proposes preliminary ideas and options for a basic campus and urban framework in Allston.

  • Tree huggers

    The Arnold Arboretum’s program for preschoolers that serves the area Head Start brings very excited kids to a lovely, engaging and stimulating nature setting.

  • Tree huggers

    Outside of the Kennedy School, a couple embraces, either out of affection or a desperate attempt to keep warm.

  • Commencement notice for June 9

    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…

  • HGLC fetes award recipients

    The Harvard Gay & Lesbian Caucus (HGLC) announced this week that Alphonse Fletcher Jr. A.B. 87 and Massachusetts Representative Alice K. Wolf will receive the HGLC Civil Rights Award and Ally for Justice Award, respectively. The two will receive the award at the caucus annual Commencement Day dinner, to be held in Lowell House on June 9. In the evenings keynote speech, activist and author Keith Boykin J.D. 92 will address the nexus between the African American Civil Rights Movement and the gay civil rights movement.

  • This month in Harvard history

    May 28, 1951 – About 350 former newspaperboys convene at Boston’s Parker House to mark the 50th anniversary of the Newsboys Protective Union and to celebrate the Boston Newsboys Scholarship…

  • Police reports

    Following are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department (HUPD) for the week ending May 23. The official log is located at 1033 Massachusetts Ave., sixth floor.

  • FAS chief information officer is appointed

    Lawrence M. Levine, chief information officer and associate provost for information technology at Dartmouth College, has been named associate dean and chief information officer for the Faculty of Arts and Sciences (FAS) at Harvard. Levine will report to Executive Dean Nancy Maull. The appointment is effective Aug. 1.

  • Clearing up ‘programming myths’

    There are these amazing distributions called power laws that seem to come up over and over again throughout nature and science, explains newly tenured Professor of Computer Science Michael Mitzenmacher. Under a power law distribution, rare events happen much more frequently than one would expect. They can come about not because of any great design or plan (by humans or by nature), but by, for example, monkeys typing randomly.

  • Pioneer in immunology Rosen, 75

    Fred S. Rosen, a world leader in pediatric immunology, died on May 21 a few days short of his 75th birthday.

  • Newsmakers

    HBS professor collects Shingo Prize Harvard Business School Assistant Professor of Business Administration Steven J. Spear has won a 2005 Shingo Research and Professional Publication Prize for his article “Learning…

  • KSG tsunami recovery group seeks funding to link students

    In response to the deadly tsunami that claimed an estimated 250,000 lives this past December, a dedicated group of students at the Kennedy School of Government (KSG), along with students from other Harvard graduate programs, formed the Tsunami Recovery and Rehabilitation group. Aimed to link Harvard students with internships in Sri Lanka and Indonesia, the groups mission is to build resilience in severely damaged communities and restore hope.

  • Crimson Academy: Year Two

    The Harvard Crimson Summer Academy has welcomed 60 ready, willing, and eminently able high school freshmen and sophomores to the academic enrichment programs second year. The students represent 25 different public and parochial schools in Cambridge and Boston.

  • Murr Center serves up Tenacity

    Harvards Murr Center recently played host to the first-ever pro-am and clinic to benefit Tenacity, Bostons leading inner city, youth tennis, and literacy program. NBC-TV sports commentator and Boston Globe writer Bud Collins hosted the April 30 event, imparting his tennis wisdom with the help of several Harvard tennis players.

  • Sports in brief

    Women’s crew to compete for crown Radcliffe heavyweight crew has received one of the 12 team bids to the NCAA Championship regatta to be held May 27-29 on Lake Natoma…

  • Arbelaez appointed to Sullivan Alliance

    Harvard Medical School instructor in medicine Christian Arbelaez has been appointed to the Sullivan Alliance to Transform Americas Health Professions, a national panel working to create a diverse and better-trained health-care workforce.

  • Foley gives House testimony

    Eugene Foley, president/CEO of Harvard University Employees Credit Union, was recently invited to testify before the House Financial Services Committee as an expert witness on credit card data security. A series of conversations on this topic between the Massachusetts Credit Union League Inc. and Congressman Barney Frank, the ranking Democrat on the House Financial Services Committee, led to this invitation. Foleys testimony was specifically aimed at explaining how credit unions and their members are impacted by breaches in data security. The hearing, Assessing Data Security: Preventing Breaches and Protecting Sensitive Information, was carried in its entirety on C-Span 2.

  • CID announces 25 undergraduate travel recipients

    Harvards Center for International Development (CID) has announced that it has awarded 25 travel grants to University undergraduates this year. Eleven of these grants will support students undertaking WorldTeach Internships, while the remaining 14 will support students doing research in developing countries. The following students, including their concentrations, will travel to Costa Rica, Namibia, China, or Ecuador as WorldTeach interns. Henry Fienning 07, music and psychology, and Matthew Roller 08, economics, will travel to Costa Rica Nimet Eren 07, Near Eastern languages and civilizations, and Meike Schallert 08, government, will conduct their internship in Ecuador Carina Martin 08, neurobiology, Rabia Mir 07, social studies/Near Eastern languages and civilizations, Maria Nardell 06, social studies, Natalia Rigol 08, government/economics, and Currun Singh 07, social studies/international health and development, will travel to Namibia and Aimee Miller 06, social anthropology/human rights, and Tom Wooten 08, social studies/developing societies, will travel to South Africa.

  • At HLS, Lynne Stewart proclaims her innocence

    Lynne Stewart says that she has simply done what any good attorney would do – provide a vigorous defense for her client. But the United States Justice Department disagrees.

  • DRCLAS announces grant awards

    The David Rockefeller Center for Latin American Studies (DRCLAS) has awarded a total of 111 grants to undergraduate and graduate students pursuing research and internship projects in Latin America this coming summer. Fifty-nine undergraduate and 52 graduate students received grants to help fund summer thesis field research and internships in the public and private sectors throughout Latin America, including nine graduate student awards for projects carried out within the United States related to Latin America and/or Latino populations.