Campus & Community

All Campus & Community

  • Faculty Council March 23

    As its 11th meeting of the year on March 23, the Faculty Council discussed the work of the Task Forces on Women Faculty and Women in Science and Engineering. Dean Drew Faust and the chairs of the task forces, Professors Barbara Grosz and Evelynn Hammonds, were present for the discussion.

  • This month in Harvard history

    March 16, 1951 – Nieman Fellows produce an issue of “The Harvard Crimson” in which (among other things) the veteran journalists hand out “Oscars” (from the “Harvard Square Academy”) to…

  • Memorial service set for Ernst Mayr

    A memorial service for Alexander Agassiz Professor of Zoology Emeritus Ernst Mayr will be held April 29 at 2 p.m. in the Memorial Church. Widely considered the worlds most eminent evolutionary biologist, Mayr joined Harvards Faculty of Arts and Sciences in 1953 and led Harvards Museum of Comparative Zoology from 1961 to 1970.

  • Mystery mile

    Looking like he might be trapped inside a modernist sculpture, custodian Marcus Baptist pauses for a moment in the temporary entrance to the music building to peer through a mysterious portal.

  • Police reports

    Following are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department for the week ending March 21. The official log is located at 1033 Massachusetts Ave., sixth floor.

  • President’s office hours set for April

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

  • Trichopoulos to receive $5.8 million ‘Innovator Award’ grant

    A renowned cancer epidemiologist, Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) Professor Dimitrios Trichopoulos, has received a U.S. Department of Defense (DOD) Innovator Award to explore fetal and early-life factors associated with adult breast cancer, including whether exposure to hormones such as estrogens and insulin-like growth factors while in the womb may cause the disease years later.

  • College sets 2005-06 tuition, fees

    Harvard College has announced its fees for undergraduate tuition, room, and board for the 2005-06 academic year. Tuition is set at $28,752. Overall charges will total $41,675, an increase of 4.5 percent, including room rate, $5,148 board, $4,430 health services fee, $1,370 and student services fee, $1,975.

  • Dean Lagemann to change roles

    Ellen Condliffe Lagemann announced March 21 that she will step down as dean of the Graduate School of Education (GSE) at the close of the 2004-05 academic year and will refocus her energies on scholarship and teaching as a member of the GSE faculty.

  • Newsmakers

    Eduard Sekler awarded Austria’s Decoration for Science and Art In a March 9 ceremony at the Vienna Hofburg, Austrian President Heinz Fischer awarded the Austrian Decoration for Science and Art…

  • In brief

    CERtoon winners honored by Greenies The Harvard Green Campus Initiative held an awards luncheon Wednesday (March 23) to honor the winners of the 2005 CERtoon (“carbon emissions reduction”) Cartoon Competition.…

  • Oh mercy!

    As the Harvard and Mercyhurst womens hockey teams lined up at center ice for the customary exchange of Good games and handshakes following Saturdays (March 19) triple overtime thriller at Bright Hockey Center, visiting goaltender Desi Clark – the very root of Harvards frustration over the past four hours and 17 minutes – suddenly found herself the object of a whole lot of Crimson love. Down the procession line, Harvard players leaned into Clarks helmet a little bit closer than usual, and lingered there just a bit longer. After collecting 78 saves (a new single-game NCCA record) in what proved to be the longest game in the history of the womens tournament, the superb Mercyhurst goalkeeper earned every bit of the home teams respect.

  • Sports in brief

    First-year foiler captures NCAA title Freshman foiler Emily Cross defeated Alicja Kryczalo of Notre Dame, 15-7, to capture the NCAA women’s foil title last week. The win helped bring Harvard…

  • UHS to lower fees for student health

    Several recent initiatives have enabled the University to enact substantial cuts in next academic years rates for student Blue Cross health insurance and to restructure rates to make purchasing health insurance more affordable for students with children.

  • Rare 19th century topographical maps on display

    In the 1880s, the U.S. government set out to create detailed maps of the country, resulting in a series of topographical maps that can be viewed as both science and art. An exhibition of this rare cartography at the Harvard Map Collection features approximately 30 maps dating from 1885 to 1893. Cities like Boston and Seattle are represented but so too are Western mining towns and rural regions like Plaquemines Parish, La. These maps, many of them rare, represent early mapmaking experiments with contour depiction and the establishment of universal symbols. The exhibition runs Monday through Friday, 9 a.m.-5 p.m., at Pusey Library through June 30.

  • First African-American woman novelist revisited

    Harriet Wilson was a survivor. Now we have proof.

  • Moment of silence

    Asher Fredman 07 (left) and Francis Bok, a former slave from Sudan, share a minute of silence at the Memorial Church as part of a nationwide event sponsored by The Holocaust Memorial Museum in solidarity with hundreds of thousands of victims of the genocide in Sudan. The Harvard event was sponsored by the Darfur Action Group, a student-run coalition committed to mobilizing the University community to put public pressure on world leaders to act effectively in ending the Darfur crisis.

  • Harvard trash generation takes big dip in early ’05

    Harvard waste management officials saw a large drop in trash pickup in January, which, combined with increased rates of recycling, have them optimistic about the direction of the Universitys waste disposal efforts.

  • Linda Snyder named associate dean of FAS

    Linda Snyder has been appointed associate executive dean for physical resources and planning in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences (FAS). Reporting to FAS Executive Dean Nancy L. Maull, Snyder will assume her new role at Harvard in early May.

  • African-American Pentecostalism can renew nation, says Emory’s Robert Franklin

    According to keynote speaker Robert Franklin, there was – even before it had ended – a buzz already afoot nationally and internationally about the March 18 conference on black Pentecostalism held at Harvard Divinity School (HDS).

  • Light detected from alien planets

    Light from two worlds far from our solar system has been detected for the first time. The planets that emit it are too hot to be inhabited, at least by…

  • Mystery of how lungs grow is solved

    The puzzle of how lungs grow has been solved. Scientists watching the process in mice embryos have found that budding and branching of new air sacs is driven by the…

  • Harvard experts help sort out U.S. energy future

    John F. Kennedy School of Government energy experts testified to the U.S. Senate’s Energy and Natural Resources Committee this month (March 10) on ways to use clean coal technology to…

  • Zoning the Atlantic

    Massachusetts Secretary of Environmental Affairs Ellen Roy Herzfelder outlined Monday (March 21) what state officials hope will become the nation’s first ocean management plan to provide guidance for development projects…

  • New drug therapy cuts risk of second heart attack

    Harvard researchers have found a new treatment for heart attack that provides greater hope for the roughly one in four patients whose heart arteries remain blocked even after standard drug…

  • No time to reLAX

    Senior Elaine Belitsos drives the ball down Jordan Field with her Syracuse opponents in hot pursuit on March 16. Harvard lost the contest, 10-4, after the Orange got off four straight goals in the first period. It was the Crimsons first loss of the season, putting them at 2-1.

  • Pakistan madrassas less popular than thought

    New research is calling into question the prevalence and increasing popularity of religious schooling in Pakistan, with survey data that show previous estimates of enrollment in Islamic madrassas to be far lower than widely reported.

  • Dazzling array of scientists honor Coleman

    Sidney Coleman is famous for his physics and his wit, and both were celebrated at a recent conference that included a history-making combination of winners of nine Nobel Prizes, a Fields Medal, and an Oscar.

  • Harvard daffodil sales grow into a pretty penny

    Once again the Harvard community outdid itself in the American Cancer Societys Daffodil Days fundraiser, collecting a record $36,124. The total number of beautiful bouquets sold: 5,001, many of which (1,394) were donated to five area hospitals.

  • Sheldon White, architect of youth policy, dies at 76

    Sheldon H. Shep White, a developmental psychologist who was instrumental in the formulation of childrens policy and programs in the United States, died unexpectedly at a Boston hospital on March 17.