Campus & Community

All Campus & Community

  • Clark, Knowles honored for outstanding service:

    Jeremy R. Knowles and Robert C. Clark have each been named to the newly created position of Harvard University Distinguished Service Professor, effective July 1, President Lawrence H. Summers announced today.

  • Harvard-Cambridge Scholars set for year of exploration:

    Four Harvard seniors have been selected next years Harvard-Cambridge Scholars, allowing them to follow interests ranging from poetry to social justice to foreign policy in an unfettered program at Cambridge University.

  • New Public Policy Interns announced by Rappaport Institute

    Each summer, up to 12 students in graduate-level programs at Boston University, Harvard University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (M.I.T.), Suffolk University, and Brandeis University have the opportunity to experience working in the public sector through the Rappaport Public Policy Internship Program.

  • Radcliffe alumnae are recognized for accomplishments

    Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Linda Greenhouse 68, award-winning biographer Brenda Murphy Maddox 53, attorney Martha Minow Ed.M. 76, and pediatrician Perri Klass 78, M.D. 86 are among the distinguished women who will be honored by the Radcliffe Association at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study during Commencement/Reunion Week.

  • Music fellowships, awards sing a happy tune

    Graduate student awards The Department’s Oscar S. Schafer Award is given to students “who have demonstrated unusual ability and enthusiasm in their teaching of introductory courses, which are designed to…

  • Rockefeller Center awards internship grants

    With a record number of applicants numbering more than 100, the David Rockefeller Center for Latin American Studies (DRCLAS) has awarded more than 70 internship grants to Harvard undergraduate and graduate students. The centers internship coordinator helps students take advantage of DRCLAS contacts to find an internship that best meets their interests. Students are then invited to apply for a DRCLAS summer internship grant, as are those students who find internships on their own.

  • The big top

    Staff photos by Kris Snibbe On Commencement morning, it hovers, gossamer-like, over a stage packed with dignitaries. Its peaks rise majestically and dip sharply, evoking a turbulent sea or the…

  • DRCLAS research grants awarded

    The David Rockefeller Center for Latin American Studies (DRCLAS) has awarded 51 summer research travel grants to students either traveling to Latin America or to cities within the United States while researching Latin American topics. This year, the center awarded 23 undergraduate awards and 28 graduate awards.

  • Unknown people, influential pottery:

    The people of New Mexicos Mimbres River Valley lived a thousand years ago in small villages up and down the river.

  • Weatherhead Center awards 60 grants and fellowships

    The Weatherhead Center for International Affairs has announced that it is awarding 60 student grants and fellowships amounting to more than $100,000 for the 2003-04 academic year. Sixteen grants will support Harvard College undergraduates, 28 will support graduate students, and additional awards will be made to undergraduate and graduate student groups for their own projects. In recent years, the Weatherhead Center has increased support for Harvard students significantly, increasing both the financial resources available and the number of student awards, and establishing new programs and seminars for students.

  • New AIDS vaccine tested in U.S., Africa:

    Tests of a new vaccine against the virus that causes AIDS are being launched simultaneously in the United States and southern Africa. It is the first time that such a test will be conducted in the United State and Africa at the same time.

  • RMO to offer new presentations on spring cleaning:

    As June 30 approaches, offices throughout the University will be closing the books – and the files – on the 2002-03 academic year. To help staff in charge of keeping the Universitys files in order, the Records Management Office (RMO) is offering a new housecleaning presentation to provide guidance to office managers and other staff with the end-of-the year cleanup. The presentation will provide practical guidance on what to keep, what to store, what to shred, and what should go to the archives.

  • HUCE announces undergraduate research awards:

    The Harvard University Center for the Environment (HUCE) has announced its undergraduate summer research awards for 2003.

  • KSG students to pursue leadership opportunities

    The Center for Public Leadership (CPL) and the Council of Women World Leaders (CWWL) have announced that five Kennedy School of Government students have been named the recipients of a jointly sponsored summer internship. The five students were selected to represent the School while pursuing unique leadership opportunities around the world in the offices of several council members and advisory board members. Lecturer in public policy Brian Mandell is the programs faculty adviser. Partial funding for the internships was provided by a gift from Richard J. Phelps.

  • Errata

    In a story on the Harvard University Police Departments Rape Aggression Defense program that appeared in the May 15 issue of the Gazette, HUPD Sgt. Brian Lakin was incorrectly identified. The Gazette regrets the error.

  • United we celebrate

    Harvard Union of Clerical and Technical Workers President Adrienne Landau (left) and Director Bill Jaeger balloon the campus on Monday (May 19), just as it was decorated 15 years ago, when the election that led to the unions formation was held.

  • Police reports

    Following are some of the incidents reported to Harvard University Police Department (HUPD) for the week ending May 17. The official log is located at 1030 Massachusetts Ave., sixth floor.

  • Harvard Employees donate $1 million:

    More than 600 charities and nonprofits, largely in Boston and Cambridge, will receive grants this year thanks to the voluntary donations of thousands of Harvard faculty, staff, and retirees.

  • String theorist:

    Gary Urtons research has him in knots. Literally.

  • The Big Picture:

    Christopher Lenney can tell you what Unitarianism has to do with candlepin bowling, how Maines Great-Big Line is neither great nor big, and why the Christ Church rectory on Garden Street and the Buckingham House in Radcliffe Yard have architectural offspring in Lexington and Bedford but not Nantucket or Plymouth.

  • Newsmakers

    Sophomore is named Lehrman Scholar Harvard sophomore Thomas Wolf has recently been named one of 12 Gilder Lehrman History Scholars selected from more than 400 candidates nationwide. Wolf will be…

  • Sports briefs

    Women’s heavies stun Brown, capture EAWRC title The Radcliffe heavyweight crew (10-1, 4-1 Ivy) upset five-time defending champion Brown this past Sunday (May 18) on the Cooper River in Camden,…

  • Title bout over Title IX at Radcliffe:

    Ever since the landmark law became a talking point for the Bush administration, Title IX – some 30 years after its passage – is big news, all over again. In the current debate surrounding the 1972 piece of legislation that bans sexual discrimination in athletic programs receiving federal aid, both critics and proponents of Title IX share a surprising amount of common ground when it comes to the laws fundamental intent. After all, one would be hard pressed to defend the exclusion of anyone from athletic participation. Or to dismiss the explosion of womens participation in college sports – a 400 percent increase since President Nixon was in office – as anything less than revolutionary.

  • Overdue since ’52

    This beats the record, said Jon Lanham, associate librarian of Lamont Library, who collects late return due date cards. One from a book due in 1967 held the record until The American Revolution, Part I, 1766-1776 by Sir George Otto Trevelyan (Longman, Green, and Co., 1899) was returned this month after turning up in the collection of the Blue Hill Public Library in Maine. Due more than 50 years ago, it is Lamonts longest outstanding overdue book. Despite its late return, no fines will be enforced.

  • Med student study affirms diversity

    Racial and ethnic diversity in the student population is a positive influence that helps medical students work more effectively with patients of different backgrounds, according to a study in the May issue of Academic Medicine, the journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges. The findings were cited in a brief submitted to the Supreme Court in the University of Michigan affirmative action case.

  • Hunter-Gault delivers ‘new news out of Africa’:

    Theres new news out of Africa, said veteran journalist Charlayne Hunter-Gault.

  • African leaders assess African leadership

    Purposefully, and without fanfare, 11 prominent African leaders spent last weekend at the Kennedy School diagnosing the dilemma of elected political leadership in Africa. Why, asked two former presidents, two former prime ministers, a foreign minister, and a clutch of current and former ministers, did so many promising democrats become autocrats after their first terms in office? Why have so many initially honest leaders become corrupt? Why have so many elected officials preyed on their own peoples as kleptocrats?

  • KSG announces Roy and Lila Ash Institute:

    The Kennedy School of Government has announced the naming of the Roy and Lila Ash Institute for Democratic Governance and Innovation. The Ash Institute will build upon the Institute for Government Innovation, established in 2001 by a $50 million endowment from the Ford Foundation. A gift from Roy and Lila Ash will expand the institutes mission to advancing the understanding and practice of democracy and the innovations necessary for its success.

  • Hail fellow, well met!

    Nieman Foundation Fellow Ann M. Simmons, bureau chief for the Los Angeles Times in Johannesburg, South Africa, receives her Nieman certificate from Harvard President Lawrence H. Summers at a ceremony at Massachusetts Hall on May 15. Summers told the fellows that Harvard derives great benefits from your presence, and expressed his belief that the program helps to promote both greater knowledge and higher ethical standards – qualities needed in todays rapidly changing profession of journalism.

  • Local educators named Conant fellows

    Three Boston educators were named Conant Fellows at a ceremony hosted by Graduate School of Education (GSE) Dean Ellen Condliffe Lagemann and Boston Superintendent Thomas Payzant at the Harvard Faculty Club on Monday (May 19). The Conant Fellowships, named for Harvard President Emeritus James Bryant Conant, were established in 1986, at Harvards 350th anniversary, to recognize the contributions of educators in Boston and Cambridge public schools. The fellowships, which support study at the Harvard Graduate School of Education, are awarded for academic and professional achievement.