Campus & Community

All Campus & Community

  • Robert Johnson, 35-year employee, passes away

    Robert M. Johnson, an employee of the University for 35 years, died on Dec. 18, 2004, in Sandwich, Mass. Johnson was 83. Johnson, who retired in 1979, worked at Harvard for buildings and grounds. He was a World War II veteran and a VFW commander.

  • Remembering Dr. King

    The Honorable Joyce London Alexander delivers the keynote address at a Memorial Church service to celebrate the life and message of Civil Rights leader Martin Luther King Jr.

  • Police reports

    Following are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department (HUPD) for the week ending Jan. 31. The official log is located at 1033 Massachusetts Ave., sixth floor.

  • President holds office hours for students

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

  • Armed robbery reported on Chauncy Street

    On Jan. 26 at approximately 11:50 p.m., a male undergraduate student reported that he was the victim of an armed robbery while walking on Chauncy Street near Massachusetts Avenue. The victim stated that he was approached by three males who robbed him of his wallet, cell phone, and watch. During the robbery the victim was struck on the arm with a blunt metal object but was not physically harmed. The offenders then fled the area in a green sports utility vehicle.

  • Upcoming tsunami vigils

    As part of a nationwide candlelight vigil for victims of the tsunami, the University community is invited to gather in Copley Square on Feb. 4 from 7 to 8 p.m. Representatives from various aid organizations will discuss progress in relief efforts and speak about short- and long-term needs. At 7:45 p.m., the mayor of Cambridge, Michael A. Sullivan, will lead a moment of silence in memory of those who have died, in support of the survivors, and in gratitude to the relief workers.

  • Allston planners hear community voices

    An Allston community meeting Jan. 20 gave Harvards Allston neighbors a chance to voice opinions on the areas future, touching on everything from access to open space to traffic congestion to the location of utilities.

  • A touch of elegans

    Wondering why his relatives went bald stimulated an interest in genetics for Craig Hunter.

  • Human Rights internship deadline is approaching

    The University Committee on Human Rights Studies (UCHRS) has announced the details of its 2005 summer internship program for undergraduates. Up to 10 summer internships will be available to qualified students seeking to work for eight to 10 weeks in a human rights organization in the United States or abroad.

  • HSPH names Zelen Leadership Award winner

    The Department of Biostatistics at the Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) recently named Ross L. Prentice of the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Public Health Sciences, the 2005 recipient of its Marvin Zelen Leadership Award in Statistical Science. Prentice will deliver a lecture on June 3 at the School and be presented with a citation and an honorarium.

  • Solving the mystery of centuries-old plagues

    Harvard entomologist Edward O. Wilson believes hes solved twin centuries-old mysteries of Caribbean island ant plagues that devastated local agriculture.

  • Daffodil Days help bring spring a bit closer

    Following the record snowfall that befell Boston last month, its hard to imagine (though not for a lack of trying) that spring will ever arrive. Thankfully, with Harvards annual Daffodil Days fundraiser now under way, the art of seasonal visualization becomes a whole lot easier.

  • Newsmakers

    Mellon Foundation honors Christine Korsgaard

  • Galway charms and instructs at Sanders

    If you want to become a great flutist, Sir James Galway has some advice for you: learn to sing and dance. At a master class on Jan. 5, he told Harvard students Music has a movement associated with it that is like the feeling of dance. When you play, you have to make peoples hearts dance.

  • Fed Ex wins KSG Roy Award

    The Kennedy School of Government (KSG) recently announced that the 2005 Roy Family Award for Environmental Partnership will be given to the FedEx-Environmental Defense Future Vehicle Project.

  • Research in brief

    Dramatic gains for American Indians Identified for decades as the poorest group in the United States, American Indians living on reservations made substantial gains, both economically and socially, during the…

  • Fineberg professorship established

    Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) Associate Dean of Public Health Practice Howard K. Koh has been named the inaugural recipient of the Harvey V. Fineberg Professorship of Public Health, established to honor the former dean of the School and former Harvard provost. The appointment became effective Jan. 1.

  • Blizzard of student support for HUDS staff

    The snow was as high as an elephants eye. Every restaurant in the Square was closed. And Harvard students were getting a bit peckish. General manager of the dining hall at Leverett House Arthur Robins worried about his charges: Four hundred kids stuck here with nothing but Ramen noodles and peanut butter and jelly. Not an appetizing picture.

  • Longtime rivals team up to help those in need

    A spirit of teamwork from one of the nations oldest rivalries will take shape next week when the Harvard and Yale communities hold a blood drive challenge to see which University can raise the highest number of donations. The friendly contest is scheduled for Feb. 9 and Feb. 10 from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., and for Feb. 11 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at Adams House (26 Plympton St.). All Harvard students, staff, alumni, neighbors, and friends are welcome to join the cause.

  • Barenboim named Charles Eliot Norton Professor

    World-renowned conductor, pianist, and recording artist Daniel Barenboim has been appointed the 2006 Charles Eliot Norton Professor of Poetry at Harvard University, it was announced today (Feb. 3). He joins a list of distinguished arts scholars and professionals who have received the Norton honor since its establishment in 1925. Barenboim will deliver the Charles Eliot Norton Lectures beginning in spring 2006.

  • Subramanian joins tenured faculty

    Following a vote of the Harvard Law School (HLS) faculty, Guhan Subramanian has been promoted from assistant professor to professor of law – a tenured faculty position. A corporate law expert who specializes in deal making and corporate governance, Subramanian joined the HLS faculty in 2002 as the Joseph Flom Assistant Professor of Law and Business. Prior to this appointment, he spent three years on the faculty of Harvard Business School, where he taught courses on negotiations and business law.

  • Director’s Internship Program names host organizations

    Under the leadership of Institute of Politics (IOP) Director Phil Sharp, the Directors Internship Program annually arranges summer internships for Harvard undergraduates interested in pursuing careers in politics or public service. The institute provides stipends for living expenses.

  • Who’s got the power?

    Blogging versus journalism is over, announced media critic and blogger Jay Rosen in the title of his introductory speech at the Jan. 21-22 conference on Blogging, Journalism and Credibility: Battleground and Common Ground. It was a bold premise, but, as the conference confirmed, a bit premature.

  • Harvard community responds to tsunami

    The Harvard community responded to the tsunami disaster with grand gestures – as well as very personal ones. Numerous faculty members lent their expertise to the media and to policy-makers. The effort has drawn an as yet unknown number of students and faculty members to the region, including Harvard Medical School Professor of Medical Anthropology Byron Good and Professor of Social Medicine Mary Jo DelVecchio Good, who traveled to Indonesia to help colleagues in a Javanese medical school. Students and student groups from around the University, including the Harvard South Asian Association, organized memorial services and mounted fund drives.

  • The 2004-2005 Standing Committees for Faculty of Arts and Sciences

    Upon the recommendation of the Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences (FAS), the President approved and announced the following Standing Committees at the FAS Faculty Meeting of Oct. 19, 2004. Standing Committees of the Faculty are constituted to perform a continuing function. Each committee has been established by a vote of the Faculty, and can be dissolved only by a vote of the Faculty or, with the agreement of a particular Committee, by the Dean and Faculty Council. The Dean recommends the membership of each committee annually.

  • Radcliffe novelist reads, shares insights into writing

    For her Radcliffe Fellowship presentation last month (Jan. 12), novelist Julia Glass strayed from the expected reading of a work-in-progress followed by questions for a format she thought more appropriate to an audience of curious Radcliffe colleagues. With witty insights and foam-core illustrations – a sort of paupers PowerPoint – she invited the audience into her creative process as well as the novel shes been working on this year, Piece of Cake.

  • Two views on the conflict in Iraq

    On Jan. 13, Steven Bloomfield moderated a symposium on the war in Iraq hosted by the Weatherhead Center for International Affairs. It featured two distinguished Harvard scholars whose views on the war differ in significant ways.

  • Weekly walk for peace undeterred by snow

    Snowflakes dusting the shoulders of his overcoat and filling the brim of his brown Homburg, Peter J. Gomes, the Plummer Professor of Christian Morals and Pusey Minister in the Memorial Church, joined the small group that had gathered in front of the John Harvard statue last Wednesday (Jan. 26).

  • Shorenstein Center names ‘rich brew’ of spring fellows

    A foreign correspondent, an opinion editor, and a political communications scholar are among those recently named fellows at the Kennedy School of Governments Joan Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics and Public Policy for the spring 2005 semester.

  • Ten years after apartheid

    Until 1995 when apartheid ended in South Africa, the government spent 12 times more on the education of white children than on black children. This blatantly discriminatory policy has left a troublesome legacy.