Campus & Community

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  • Weissman International Interns return for 10th anniversary celebration

    This past summer, when Claire Porter 05 was rising at 5 a.m. to greet the Ugandan dawn by recording the vocalizations of colobus monkeys, she hardly imagined she was leading a Harvard trend. Delivering babies in rural Mexico, Ashkan Abbey 05 didnt have a broad educational initiative on his mind.

  • One on One: Kerry defends Iraq stance

    This is the second in a series of interviews with Democratic presidential candidates.

  • Ambassadors discuss Southeast Europe’s future

    A stronger, larger Europe will become a better partner, not a bigger rival, to the United States in international affairs, according to European ambassadors and consuls gathered at the Kennedy School of Government last week (Oct. 15).

  • Segregation talk kicks off population lecture series

    Deep and persistent racial segregation remains a fact of American life and leads to a host of social ills and health concerns that perpetuate stereotypes and create a vicious cycle keeping many African Americans trapped in inner-city neighborhoods.

  • Healthy by design

    Promoting Physical Activity and Health by Urban Design – a conference sponsored by the School of Public Health (SPH) and the Design School – will be held Nov. 4 at the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, 600 Atlantic Ave. (across from South Station). With obesity emerging as a serious public health problem in America, the conference will focus on how infrastructure can be changed to bring physical activity opportunities close to where people live and incorporate exercise as a routine part of the day.

  • ‘Creativity is for everyone’

    Be habitual. Get organized. Make decisions.

  • Low-carb more effective than low-fat

    A study put three groups of dieters on different regimens. They included a low-fat group, a low-carbohydrate group that ate the same number of calories, and a third group on…

  • Project finds Hindus in New Jersey, Buddhists in Montana

    An influx of new immigrants that began in 1965 when U.S. immigration laws were liberalized has changed our society in ways that contradict traditional assumptions about the correlation of religion…

  • President to hold office hours on Nov. 3

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

  • Boston Public Schools to participate in 3-year project

    The Harvard Graduate School of Education (GSE), Harvard Business School (HBS), and nine urban school districts announced the Public Education Leadership Project (PELP) on Tuesday (Oct. 21). PELP is a joint venture collaboratively designed to dramatically improve the educational outcomes of these school systems. The districts, representing more than a million students in urban areas across the nation, include Boston, Chicago, Minneapolis, and San Francisco.

  • For many, prenups seem to predict doom

    In the event of divorce – statistically, the reality for nearly half the marriages in America – a prenuptial agreement has the potential to save the divorcing couple anguish, arguments, and thousands of dollars. It may represent an exit agreement far closer to their wishes than the court-ordered divorce. A good prenuptial agreement can even exert a positive force on a healthy marriage.

  • This month in Harvard history

    Oct. 17, 1640 – The Great and General Court grants Harvard the revenues of the Boston-Charlestown ferry, which plies the shortest route between Boston and Charlestown, Cambridge, Watertown, Medford, and…

  • Summers to hold office hours on Nov. 3

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

  • Fund established in memory of HMS grad student

    Brina Sheeman Shackelford, a fifth-year graduate student at the Medical School, died last weekend in a car accident in New Hampshire. Shackelford was admired by those who knew her as a truly bright and compassionate friend and colleague. The Shackelford family would like to honor her commitment to graduate work in the sciences by requesting that donations in Shackelfords memory be made to Graduate Program, Harvard Medical School, Brina Sheeman Shackelford Memorial Fund, 25 Shattuck St., Boston, MA 02115.

  • In brief

    K through 12 tutors needed Cambridge School Volunteers Inc. (CSV) – a private, nonprofit organization that recruits, trains, and places volunteers in Cambridge Public Schools – is recruiting people of…

  • Newsmaker

    Frosch receives NAE award The National Academy of Engineering (NAE) recently presented senior research fellow at the Kennedy School of Government Robert Frosch with the Arthur M. Bueche Award. Frosch…

  • Puddle piercing

    A puddle left by an overnight rainstorm is pierced by the image of the Memorial Church steeple appearing behind Sever Hall.

  • HBS students named Toigo Foundation Fellows

    The Robert Toigo Foundation, a leading organization supporting the advancement of exceptional minority business degree students and alumni within the finance industry, recently announced the selection of 13 Harvard Business School (HBS) students as Toigo Fellows. The new fellows include Schelton Assoumou, Tchintcia Barros, Eugene Chiu, Jason Davis, Jaimee Fomer, Christopher Johnson, Leroy Kennedy, Kristal OBryant, Edward Pascual, Nicole Sherwood, Alberto Suarez, Seble Tareke, and Jerome Thomas.

  • The Big Picture

    Im a spiritual person, a Christian, but Im not what you would call orthodox. Im a preachers kid. My dad was the minister of a small, evangelical church on the south side of Atlanta. I learned how to pray as a kid, but I found that it didnt work for me. What does work for me is using my hands, making things. For me, its a way of being in a meditative state, losing track of time, finding the groove. And when Im making something for someone, its like saying a prayer for them.

  • Crimson rack Crusaders, 3-0

    Sophomore goalkeeper Ryan Johnson registered a career-high 10 saves on Tuesday afternoon (Oct. 14) to preserve a 3-0 shutout against visiting Holy Cross (1-8-1). With the win, Johnson – ranked second in the Ivy League in the number of goals allowed per game (.84) – earns his third shutout of the season. Still unbeaten at home with a five-game win streak, mens soccer improves to 5-3-3 (0-1-1 Ivy) on the season.

  • Sports briefs

    Crimson bounce Big Red, 27-0 Junior quarterback Ryan Fitzpatrick completed 12 of 17 passes for two touchdowns and rushed for another to shut out Cornell this past Saturday (Oct. 11)…

  • Harvard recycling rates rise, hit record

    Harvards waste recycling rate continued its upward climb last year, reaching a record 36 percent and preserving enough paper fiber to equal 80 acres of forest cut for pulpwood.

  • Interest in public service careers jumps

    At the Office of Career Services (OCS) Career Forum last Friday (Oct. 10), Will Krause 04 expressed pride and relief. Hed made his way halfway around the booths that lined Gordon Track without being lured away from his chosen career of government. Ive managed to avoid the consulting trap so far, he said.

  • Artists’ visions/versions of ancient Sardis

    A small map greets you as you enter the Fogg Museums exhibition The City of Sardis: Approaches in Graphic Recording.

  • Ahrens and Flaherty sing a song of inspiration

    Richard Cozzens 07 has written a love duet in which a man who has gone to the moon to be with his lover realizes that he cannot love her away from the Earth.

  • Skating the light fantastic

    Was it to watch Olympic stars, to cheer local ice-skaters, to support the Jimmy Fund of the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, or to take a break from Red Sox mania? Whatever spurred people to attend Eliot Houses 34th An Evening with Champions, they were well rewarded, watching phenomenal ice-skaters, such as Olympic gold medalist Oksana Baiul, Olympic pair skaters Tiffany Scott and Philip Dulebohn, and eight-time British champion Steven Cousins.

  • Third Sackler Saturday series to open this weekend

    This fall the Harvard University Art Museums (HUAM) will return with a third year of the successful Sackler Saturdays program. Families with children ages 6 to 11 are invited to explore artworks from ancient cultures and distant lands such as China, Japan, Korea, India, Greece, and Rome. The program, which is free and open to the public, takes place in the Arthur M. Sackler Museum. The first event – A Big Dig: Finding Out About Buried Treasures in the Sackler Museum – will be held Saturday (Oct. 18).

  • Edwards plays ‘Hardball’

    Sen. John Edwards (D-N.C.), fighting to break out of the middle of the crowded pack of Democratic presidential contenders, answered his critics Monday night (Oct. 13) during the first in a series of one-on-one interviews with the candidates at Harvards Kennedy School of Government. The program was televised live from the John F. Kennedy Jr. Forum on MSNBCs Hardball With Chris Matthews. Matthews conducted the interview.

  • Engelhorn family endows internship to Busch-Reisinger Museum

    Marjorie B. Cohn, acting director of the Harvard University Art Museums (HUAM), recently announced that members of the Christof Engelhorn family have endowed a curatorial internship at the Busch-Reisinger Museum. According to Cohn, Formal internships have been a part of the Art Museums academic mandate for decades and with this endowment the Busch-Reisinger Museum will from now on be a certain and permanent focus for curatorial training.

  • Breast cancers tied to brain survival

    A gene produces a protein that evidently protects cancer cells in the same way it shields brain cells from damage caused by diseases like Alzheimer’s and strokes. “The same substance…