Campus & Community

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  • President Summers holds May office hours

    President Lawrence H. Summers will hold office hours for students in his Massachusetts Hall office on the following date:

  • Harvard student groups rally to launch inaugural AIDS summit

    In an effort to inspire a new wave of dialogue, action, and service among youth in the fight against HIV/AIDS, students from the Harvard Black Mens Forum (BMF), the Harvard AIDS Coalition (HAC), the Harvard African Students Association (HASA), and the Harvard Concert Commission (HCC) will be co-hosting, for the first time, the Unite Against AIDS Summit: HIV/AIDS in Africa and the African Diaspora. Taking place April 22-23, the summit is the culmination of years of planning between the student groups on how to get more youth involved in the battle against HIV/AIDS. The summit has a particular focus on mobilizing black youth, who, despite being the demographic group most affected by the disease, are severely underrepresented in advocacy and service concerning the epidemic.

  • Words and pictures

    Pulitzer Prize-winning author and lecturer in public policy at the Carr Center for Human Rights Policy Samantha Power speaks with photojournalist James Nachtwey prior to a panel discussion titled Photojournalism and Human Rights held as part of a weekend of events at Tufts University. Both Power and Nachtwey were recently named 2005 National Magazine Award Winners for work they did separately on the crisis in Darfur in the Sudan.

  • Governments are ‘for the people,’ too

    More than 150 international leaders, scholars. and practitioners gathered at the John F. Kennedy School of Government last week for a four-day conference aimed at sharing experiences and fostering discussion on how to improve democracys functioning.

  • Newsmakers

    Four professors win Guggenheim Fellowships

  • In brief

    Concert to raise funds for Sarcoma Foundation The premiere of “Cancione,” a work for strings by award-winning jazz violinist Ramsey Ameen, will be dedicated to the memory of the wife…

  • PBK elects 24 juniors to Harvard chapter

    Twenty-four Harvard College juniors were recently elected to the Harvard chapter of Phi Beta Kappa (PBK), the national collegiate honors society. The newly elected members will be inducted on May 2.

  • Boys of spring sizzle

    After taking three out of four games against Yale this past weekend (April 16-17) at ODonnell Field, the Harvard baseball team seemed to climb the Ivy standings with the ferocity of a hot hit single on the Top 40 charts. With eight Ivy games left in this season-within-a-season, the Crimson, at 10-2 (17-10 overall), are sitting pretty atop the Red Rolfe Division standings. Though much like in the fickle music business, the Harvard club will have to continue producing against host Brown in a pair of doubleheaders this weekend (April 23-24) to maintain its prestigious spot.

  • ‘New cause’ for Edwards: Eradicate poverty

    Failed Democratic vice presidential candidate John Edwards brought his positive populism back to the Kennedy School on April 13, sounding a call to eradicate poverty in the United States. Terming it his new cause, Edwards told a packed audience at the John F. Kennedy Jr. Forum that citizens and government working together have a lot of work to do to raise living standards amongst the poorest of the poor.

  • Poll: College students like private account idea

    A new national poll by Harvard Universitys Institute of Politics (IOP), located at the John F. Kennedy School of Government, finds seven out of 10 of Americas college students are concerned Social Security will not pay out benefits when they retire, with students significantly more likely to support investment of Social Security taxes in private accounts than the general public. In addition, the poll showed college students at odds with the current administration on foreign policy issues, with only about one out of three in favor of the United States work to spread freedom and democracy across the world and nearly three out of four believing the United States should let the UN and other countries take the lead in solving international crises and conflicts.

  • OFA announces Arts First grants

    Arts First, Harvards annual weekend festival of students in the arts, will celebrate its 13th anniversary May 5-8. Sponsored by Harvard Universitys Board of Overseers, the festival involves more than 2,000 students in presenting some 200 concerts, multimedia presentations, exhibitions, public artwork, and theatrical and dance productions.

  • Energy panel participants discuss reform

    Participants on an independent bipartisan panel examining energy reform discussed recommendations to Congress Thursday (April 14) that would see caps on greenhouse gas emissions, new investments in nuclear and renewable technology, and financial support for clean coal plants.

  • John Forrest Kain

    At a Meeting of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences March 15, 2005, the following Minute was placed upon the records.

  • Stem cell research debate continues

    Stem cell research is a complicated subject, not only scientifically but ethically as well. This past Friday (April 15) a debate at Harvard Law School promised to shed light on…

  • Investigating health disparities

    Addressing health disparities is among the top priorities of the National Institutes of Health (NIH), said the agency’s director Elias Zerhouni at the second of three Harvard symposia on April…

  • Obese women two times more likely to have a stroke

    A long-awaited federally funded study conducted by researchers from Brigham and Women’s Hospital (BWH) recently announced that taking an aspirin a day helps women prevent one of the nation’s leading…

  • Rainwater cleans vehicles, river

    In a demonstration project designed to conserve water, control pollutants washing into the Charles River, and recharge groundwater supplies for the dry summer months, Harvard has begun using rainwater to…

  • The world according to McElwee

    To anyone whose idea of a documentary film is an investigation of a specific subject using original footage, interviews, and archival images, the films of Ross McElwee may seem quirky, to say the least.

  • Sports in brief

    Golf struggles at Ivy champs Harvard’s men’s and women’s golf teams finished eighth and sixth, respectively, in Ivy League championship action this past weekend (April 16-17). The men turned in…

  • Are you being served?

    Alexis Martire 05 plays number three doubles against Boston College on April 19 at home. The Crimson, ranked 19th in the nation, downed the Eagles, 6-1, to capture their sixth consecutive victory.

  • Japanologist brings broad perspective

    Medical historian and Japanologist Shigehisa Kuriyama, who has brought an unusually broad perspective to the study of world medical history, has been appointed Reischauer Institute Professor of Cultural History in Harvard Universitys Faculty of Arts and Sciences, effective July 1.

  • Hamashita to present Reischauer Lectures

    Established in 1986, the annual Reischauer Lecture series is sponsored this year by the Fairbank Center for East Asian Research and the Reischauer Institute of Japanese Studies. Renowned international scholar Takeshi Hamashita will present the two remaining lectures.

  • Pointe, counterpointe

    Hypnotic, energetic, vital, moving, amusing, and gravity-defying are just a few of the adjectives that need to precede the premier word describing a recent University dance premiere – original. Harvard Dance Programs Spring 2005 Dancers Viewpointe V made the stage look like a trampoline last Thursday (April 14) as works of talented local and national artists bounced off the original creations of students. All student works are mentored throughout the year by a panel of choreographers to bring them to their fullest potential for these spring performances. Dance Program Director Elizabeth Bergmann, who contributed a piece of her own to the show, blended original choreography, original music, and original costume designs, and came up with a daring, innovative, and original mix of brave new work.

  • Six honored as Harvard College Professors

    Being an outstanding teacher requires talent, inspiration, experience, dedication, and hard work – a challenge for anyone, but a particularly daunting one for those who are also expected to stay on top of a complex and rapidly advancing field of knowledge and to make regular contributions to that field in the form of books and articles.

  • Assault and battery reported on Bow Street

    The Cambridge Police Department (CPD) received a report of an assault and battery that occurred on Bow Street near Adams House on April 6 at approximately 9 p.m. According to the report, a female undergraduate student was walking down Bow Street when a male suspect pushed her to the ground. The victim kneed the suspect in the groin and attempted to punch him, before fleeing the area.

  • Engineering with cells

    David Mooney is examining the bodys natural cellular functions in hopes of becoming a very good copycat.

  • In brief

    Arts First volunteers are needed for May festivities Organizers of Arts First – Harvard’s four-day celebration of music, theater, dance, and visual arts – seek volunteers for the Performance Fair…

  • Sports in brief

    Crew champs cruise past Brown The defending national champion Harvard heavyweight crew opened its season in winning fashion, capturing its fifth consecutive Stein Cup opposite Brown on the Charles this…

  • Qazir says Iraq’s future potentially bright

    Iraqi society today is working toward intertwined goals of development, security, and a new political order, each of which is dependent on the other and each crucial for the nations future, according to the United Nations chief envoy to Iraq.

  • MCB’s sessions get students hopping

    Put 18 or 20 high school seniors in a science lab, and you can expect a little saunter, a little swagger, a lot of wisecracking. But you hope for the best. Are they excited to be at Harvard?