Campus & Community

All Campus & Community

  • Mellon gift of $2.1 million will help save photographs

    With a $2.1 million gift from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, the Harvard University Library will establish a comprehensive, Universitywide preservation program for Harvards holdings of more than 7.5 million photographs. The Mellon Foundation is providing a $1.25 million matching grant to endow the position of senior photograph conservator in the librarys Weissman Preservation Center as well as $850,000 to help launch the new program during a six-year start-up period.

  • Joaquim Chissano expresses hope for future of Africa

    Declaring that Africa is winning the battle against violent conflicts, Mozambican President Joaquim Chissano brought his vision of hope, prosperity, and peace to a packed forum at the Kennedy School on Sunday (Sept. 19).

  • Safra Foundation Center welcomes graduate fellows

    The Edmond J. Safra Foundation Center for Ethics (formerly the Center for Ethics and the Professions) recently announced its Graduate Fellows in Ethics for the 2004-05 academic year. The fellows are Harvard-enrolled graduate students and professional students who focus on ethics topics in their research. During the fellowship year, they will pursue philosophical topics relevant to political and professional practice. Michael Blake, professor of philosophy and public policy at the Kennedy School of Government (KSG), will chair the graduate fellows seminar.

  • Shorenstein Center lists fellows, visiting faculty

    A BBC senior producer, a political journalist, and an international scholar of political campaigning are among the recently named fellows and visiting faculty at the Kennedy School of Governments (KSG) Joan Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics and Public Policy this semester.

  • Charles Warren Center names nine scholars for 2004-05

    Howard Mumford Jones Professor of American Studies Lizabeth Cohen, director of the Charles Warren Center for Studies in American History, recently announced the names of nine scholars participating in the centers 2004-05 workshop: The Culture and Politics of the Built Environment. This years Warren Fellows were selected from a pool of more than 75 applicants by Cohen and workshop co-director Margaret Crawford, professor of urban design and planning theory at the Harvard Graduate School of Design (GSD).

  • The wide world – close up

    A chance to gaze eye-to-eye with a chuckwalla lizard, a couple of stolen minutes drawing centuries-old ritual bells, discovering the contours of an ancient stone – these are just a few moments captured by neighbors and visitors at the Harvard Museums second Community Day.

  • Moving on up

    Elissa Poorman ’06, and her mother, Jeanne Poorman recycle boxes together while moving into Eliot House this fall.

  • Drug-resistant TB strains may spread easily

    International efforts to combat tuberculosis may inadvertently be aiding the emergence of deadly, drug-resistant strains of the disease, Harvard School of Public Health researchers found.

  • Faculty Council notice for Sept. 22

    At its first meeting of the year the Faculty Council heard a report on the Harvard College Curricular Review from Deans William Kirby (history and FAS) and Benedict Gross (mathematics and Harvard College). The Council also considered, with Dean Peter Ellison (anthropology and GSAS), a proposed Ph.D. program in Systems Biology. Professor Marc Kirschner, chair of Harvard Medical Schools Department of Systems Biology, was present for this discussion.

  • Kennedy School names 2004-05 Carr Fellows

    A new class of fellows whose work extends from Iraq to Rwanda will join the Kennedy School of Governments (KSG) Center for Human Rights Policy for the 2004-05 academic year. The class of fellows includes experts and activists from various disciplines including anthropology, law, and journalism, and will focus on topics ranging from democratization within Islamic tradition to postwar reconciliation.

  • Fools for science take stage again

    On Sept. 30 at Sanders Theatre, good and bad science will take center stage at the 14th First Annual Ig Nobel Prize ceremony. Showered with applause and paper airplanes, this years class of winners will be honored for scientific achievements that first make people laugh, then think. Genuine Nobel laureates will be on-hand to present the prizes.

  • Kennedy School establishes Anna Lindh Professorship

    The Kennedy School of Government (KSG) recently named a new endowed professorship in global leadership and public policy in memory of Anna Lindh, the late foreign minister of Sweden, who was murdered one year ago. The Anna Lindh Professorship will promote advanced scholarship, teaching, research, and outreach from a leading member of KSGs faculty.

  • Quantum network to deliver secure messages

    Talked about for decades, a quantum code key system joined to the Internet has now been demonstrated. It sends encoding and decoding keys as light pulses between Harvard and Boston…

  • Helping hand given to promising local students

    It was quiet in Boylston Halls Ticknor Lounge one early August afternoon. But the silence masked the concentration of 30 academically talented, financially disadvantaged Boston and Cambridge youths as they imagined their futures – and plotted their paths to get there.

  • Interfaculty initiative aims to heal U.S. health care

    Theres an industry in the United States where costs are skyrocketing and quality is slipping dangerously. Despite astonishing technological advances, customers are generally dissatisfied and the workforce is grumbling louder than ever. The product is unavailable to a growing segment of Americans, and those who can access it must often wait up to six months for it.

  • This month in Harvard history

    Sept. 19, 1639 – Accused of neglecting and physically mistreating students, Nathaniel Eaton is fined and discharged as Master of the College by the Great and General Court of Massachusetts…

  • HUPD puts ‘Playing It Safe’ on Web site

    The Harvard University Police Department (HUPD) is committed to assisting all members of the Harvard community in providing for their own safety and security. Harvards annual security report, prepared in compliance with The Jeanne Clery Disclosure of Campus Security Policy and Campus Crime Statistics Act (the Clery Act), is titled Playing It Safe, and can be found on the HUPDs Web site at http://www.hupd.harvard.edu/prevention_handbook.php.

  • Memorial services

    Evon Z. Vogt memorial service to be held at Memorial Church A memorial service for Evon Z. Vogt, professor of social anthropology, emeritus, will be held Friday (Sept. 17) at…

  • Police reports

    Following are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department (HUPD) for the weeks beginning Aug. 25 and ending Sept. 13. The official log is located at 1033 Massachusetts Ave., sixth floor.

  • Appointments

    Kathleen McCartney named academic dean Professor of Education Kathleen McCartney began serving as academic dean McCartney of the Graduate School of Education on July 1. An early-childhood education expert, McCartney…

  • Newsmakers

    CHA elects new chair, vice chair Cambridge Health Alliance (CHA) recently announced that Francis H. Duehay, community leader, educator, and former elected official, has been elected to chair CHA’s board…

  • MAC gets into shape

    In addition to a number of other improvements, renovations currently being completed at the Malkin Athletic Center include enclosure of the north mezzanine to provide additional areas for cardiovascular equipment. Al LeBlanc (left) and Sal Fazio of Fazio Construction in Malden work on the ceiling of this area.

  • Karen Mapp to join GSE faculty as lecturer

    Karen L. Mapp, an expert on families and communities in education, will join the Harvard Graduate School of Education (GSE) as a lecturer on education beginning Jan. 1, 2005, for a multiyear term.

  • The Big Picture

    When Julia Ashmun was a teenager, she told her mother she wanted to be proficient on the water, in the water, and under the water. Given Ashmuns coastal upbringing, which included stints in California, Florida, the Caribbean, and a year on a 27-foot sailboat, such a goal was not far-fetched. By age 15, Ashmun taught scuba diving and sailing and was an avid surfer. The familys move to New England added frozen water to Ashmuns repertoire, when Boston University recruited her to play ice hockey before she knew how to skate. I had never seen a hockey game before, but I was in really good shape, she says.

  • Donato named coach of men’s hockey

    Former Harvard hockey captain, Olympian, and NHL player Ted Donato was named head coach of the Harvard mens ice hockey team on July 2. A 1991 graduate of Harvard who captured an NCAA championship as a sophomore, Donato becomes just the sixth person to serve as Harvards head coach since 1950. The appointment is Donatos first in coaching.

  • Tercentenary to become screening room

    The third annual Its Movie Time at Harvard – a free outdoor film screening presented by President Lawrence H. Summers – will be held Sept. 26 at 7 p.m. in Tercentenary Theatre. The event is open to the entire University community and their families.

  • Sports briefs and newsmakers

    Rugby club seeks grad student players The Harvard M.B.A./Grad Rugby Club seeks graduate student players of all experience levels for training, matches, tours, or tournaments. Trainings are held Tuesday and…

  • Kuwait program accepting grant proposals

    The Kennedy School of Government (KSG) recently announced the seventh funding cycle for the Kuwait Program Research Fund. With support from the Kuwait Foundation for the Advancement of Sciences, a KSG faculty committee will consider applications for small one-year grants (up to $30,000) to support advanced research by Harvard faculty members on issues of critical importance to Kuwait and the Gulf. Grants can be applied toward research assistance, travel, summer salary, and course buyout.

  • Whipple, world-renowned astronomer, dies

    Fred Lawrence Whipple, whose work on comets revolutionized our understanding of these once enigmatic visitors, died Aug. 30 at the age of 97 following a prolonged illness. He was the Phillips Professor of Astronomy Emeritus at Harvard and a senior physicist at the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory (SAO).

  • Obituary: Paul A. Zizzo, 58

    Paul A. Zizzo of Arlington, Mass., benefits manager for Harvard University, died on Aug. 15 of complications from back surgery. He was 58.