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  • Hasty Pudding to announce ‘persons’ of year

    The Hasty Pudding Woman of the Year festivities will be held on Thursday, Feb. 12. At 2 p.m., the Woman of the Year will lead a parade through the streets of Cambridge. Following the parade, the president of the Hasty Pudding Theatricals and the vice president of the cast will roast this years winner and present her with her Pudding Pot at 2:40 p.m. in the Hasty Pudding Theatre. After the roast, several numbers from the Hasty Puddings 156th production, As The Word Turns, will be previewed.

  • This month in Harvard history

    Feb. 13, 1847 – The Harvard Corporation votes to establish “an advanced school of instruction in theoretical and practical science and in the other usual branches of academic learning, to…

  • Police reports

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

  • Checkered path to a law degree

    Colorful tiles line the walls along a ramp to the second floor in Pound Hall at the Law School, brightening the stroll to class.

  • President Summers holds student office hours on Feb. 10

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

  • Erdogan calls for cooperation

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan called for an Istanbul process Friday (Jan. 30) that would band together the United States, Europe, and the Middle East in an effort to boost democratic government, promote economic growth, and ensure security to the troubled region.

  • Shorenstein Center names spring fellows

    CNNs Tokyo bureau chief, a United Nations information service director, and the editor of The Hindu are among the fellows this semester at the Kennedy Schools Joan Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics and Public Policy.

  • Scientists identify antibody that blocks SARS virus infection

    An antibody plucked from a library of human antibodies has powerfully blocked infection by the SARS (seere acute respiratory syndrome) irus in laboratory tests, scientists at Harard-affiliated Dana-Farber Cancer Institute report. This discoery could expedite the deelopment of an antibody drug for the preention or early treatment of SARS, which killed nearly 800 people in a global outbreak last year.

  • Strange brew in this Beanpot

    In the marquee game of the 52nd annual Beanpot Tournament this past Monday night (Feb. 2) at the FleetCenter, the Harvard mens hockey team quickly found itself embroiled in a comedy of errors. Against the No. 2 Boston College Eagles, the Crimson – appearing a bit rusty after exam period – were outshot, outplayed, and just plain unlucky.

  • Newsmakers

    HMS researcher wins Crafoord Prize Latham Family Professor of Pathology at Harvard Medical School (HMS) Timothy Springer, a senior investigator at the Center for Blood Research (CBR) Institute for Biomedical…

  • Libraries take a stand

    Students and faculty logging onto the HOLLIS catalog after winter break found a decrease in the number of periodicals available from Elsevier, one of the worlds largest publishers of scientific journals. According to Sidney Verba, Carl H. Pforzheimer University Professor and director of the University Library, the decision to eliminate these journals was the result of 15 months of careful consideration. It was driven not only by current financial realities, Verba states, but also – and perhaps more importantly – by the need to reassert control over our collections and to encourage new models for research publication at Harvard. Similar steps have been taken at other major research institutions, including Cornell, Johns Hopkins, and the Triangle Research Libraries Network.

  • Study of testosterone replacement therapy not linked to prostate cancer, heart disease risk

    A retrospective analysis by researchers at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC) published in The New England Journal of Medicine found no causal relationship between testosterone replacement and prostate cancer or heart disease risk

  • Kayden named Frank Backus Williams Professor

    Jerold Kayden, a faculty member of the Graduate School of Design (GSD), has been appointed the Frank Backus Williams Professor of Urban Planning and Design.

  • Amid the hype, opportunity lurks for students with loans

    If youve got a student loan, then youve probably got mail.

  • Fatty acid imbalance discovered in cystic fibrosis patients

    The discovery that cystic fibrosis (CF) patients have an imbalance of fatty acids in their tissues could help pave the way for a new treatment for this genetic disease that affects approximately 30,000 people nationwide. These findings extend previous observations from mouse studies and show that the same fatty acid abnormality occurs in humans with CF, is related to the degree of abnormality in the gene, and is not a consequence of inflammation.

  • In brief

    Is there a docent in the house? The Semitic Museum at Harvard University is looking for volunteer docents to guide tours for the new exhibit “The Houses of Ancient Israel:…

  • Theologian J. Bryan Hehir to join KSG faculty

    Kennedy School of Government Dean Joseph S. Nye Jr. has announced the appointment of the Rev. J. Bryan Hehir as the Parker Gilbert Montgomery Professor of the Practice of Religion and Public Life. Hehir will take up his post in the fall 2004 semester.

  • Diversity marks Institute of Politics’ spring fellows

    The former mayor of Knoxville, Tenn., the vice president of programs at the Rainbow/PUSH Coalition, and the former governor of Minnesota, among others, have been selected for fellowships this spring at Harvards Institute of Politics (IOP) at the Kennedy School of Government.

  • New categories cause confusion

    Changes in the 2000 census that added a racial category and allowed multirace responses permitted a new flexibility in self-identification, but also diluted the data collection that underpins social justice efforts, according to a former U.S. Census director who spoke at Harvard Monday (Feb. 2).

  • Connecting on the ice

    It may have been just a college hockey rink, but for the 60 or so children who got to test their skills with the Harvard Mens Hockey team on that ice last Wednesday (Jan. 28) night, it was like being in the Boston Fleet Center…

  • Research grants available through Schlesinger Library

    The Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study is now accepting applications for its Carol K. Pforzheimer Student Fellowship grants. Intended to encourage Harvard College students to use the resources of the Schlesinger Library, the fellowship awards $100 to $2,500 to cover research expenses, or as a stipend in lieu of summer employment, to enable the recipient to pursue research in the librarys collections.

  • HRES proposes 2004-05 increases for Affiliated Housing

    Proposed 2004-2005 rents for current affiliated residents living in Affiliated Housing: Harvard Real Estate Services (HRES) has proposed a 0 percent rent increase for the majority of current Affiliated Housing…

  • ‘A day in the life …’

    On Friday (Jan. 30), more than 750 Boston public high school students ventured out to area legislative offices, newspapers, police stations, banks, hospitals, businesses, and even Harvard to get a glimpse of a typical workday in the real world. Now in its ninth year, the Boston Groundhog Shadow Job Day has tightened the ties between schools and workplaces, giving students the exposure they need to consider career options and see firsthand the real-world applications of the skills they learn in school.

  • You can’t bounce back without LOX

    You cant be flexible without LOX, scientists have discovered.

  • The Big Picture

    Its 5:30 on a windy January night, and around Harvard Square, pedestrians strain against the cold, counting each excruciating step to their destinations, their scarves and mittens and the bulkiest of coats providing scant protection from the free-falling temperatures. Suddenly, from the direction of Concord Ave., a bright orange figure slices through the chill – on a bicycle.

  • Tenacious C

    A tenacious Harvard womens hockey team tuckered out Boston College, 4-0, in the semifinal round of the 26th annual Beanpot Tournament this past Tuesday evening (Feb. 3) in Chestnut Hill. The Crimson, who endured a career-high 59 saves by B.C. netminder Lisa Davis, blasted the net 63 times (to the Eagles eight) en route to the win.

  • KSG students get up close and personal as candidates mix it up

    Two busloads of Harvard students joined the political scrum in New Hampshire last weekend, heading north for an intensive, daylong experience campaigning in the Granite States first-in-the-nation primary.

  • CfA to host double-feature schlockfest

    As part of its ongoing series, the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics (CfA) will host the decidedly offbeat Sci-Fi Camp-o-Rama on Feb. 7 at 6:30 p.m. in Phillips Auditorium, 60 Garden St. Rescheduled from this past December following one of the months snowstorms, CfA will screen two of the worst sci-fi movies (or just movies?) ever made: Ed Woods masterpiece Plan 9 From Outer Space and director Phil Tuckers one and only film, The Robot Monster.

  • Winter dance

    At the Carpenter Center, branches dance in the wind, perhaps inspiring the children passing by to break into a spontaneous dance of their own.

  • This month in Harvard history

    Jan. 9, 1950 – Freshman Dean Delmar Leighton issues the following notice to his charges: All occupants of non-fireproof dormitories living above the ground are expected to report at the Indoor Athletic Building (now the Malkin Athletic Center) for practice on the fire ropes. Instruction will be given by the University Safety Patrol. [. . .] (Quotation: Harvard Alumni Bulletin, Jan. 28, 1950)