Campus & Community

All Campus & Community

  • Newsmakers

    Daniels named director of international student programs Helaine Daniels, formerly of the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), Oxfam, Mobil Oil Africa, and the Boston Globe, has been named director…

  • The Big Picture

    It was the beat that lured Allison Stamiris in from the street: the hypnotic, propulsive drumbeat emanating from the second story of The Dance Complex in Central Square.

  • FAS discusses recommendations made by CASAH

    At its May 6 Faculty Meeting, members of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences (FAS) discussed recommendations made by the Committee to Address Sexual Assault at Harvard (CASAH) for improving educational and support services related to sexual violence. Faculty members consistently praised the rigor and care of the committees report and further discussed the importance of alcohol education, communal responsibility for a campus culture intolerant of sexual violence, the effectiveness of the College disciplinary process, and gender roles.

  • Getting their kicks

    Harvard soccer players Katie Hodel 04 (left to right), Emily Colvin 05, Liza Barber 05, Julia James 06, and Katie Shields 06 dodge a slew of balls delivered by a group of middle-school girls who visited the campus this past Friday (May 2) as part of the City Kicks program. Over 40 young women from Dorchester participated in the afternoon clinic, which included drills, soccer tips, and the chance to hang with some cool Harvard student-athletes. City Kicks is a nonprofit organization that provides after-school soccer activities for public school girls in Greater Boston.

  • Baseball takes pair of must-wins for division title, to face Tigers Saturday

    With their backs against the wall, the Harvard baseball team came out swinging against Dartmouth this past Sunday (May 4) at ODonnell Field. Nineteen hits later, the Crimson had defeated a dangerous Big Green team, 5-3 and 14-10, to clinch its second-straight Red Rolfe Division title. The previous afternoon in Hanover, Harvard dropped a key doubleheader, 2-1 and 18-5, setting up Sundays must-win scenario in the hunt for the division title.

  • Sports briefs

    Title IX discussion at HBS The Department of Athletics will hold the final installment of its four-part discussion series celebrating the sesquicentennial anniversary of intercollegiate athletics on Friday (May 9).…

  • APS elects seven Harvard faculty

    The American Philosophical Society (APS) – the countrys oldest learned society – has elected seven Harvard faculty members among its most recent class of inductees.

  • KSG, Taiwan sign ‘understanding’ memo:

    Joseph S. Nye Jr., dean of the Kennedy School of Government, and Director-General C.K. Liu of the Taipei Economic and Cultural Office in Boston, representing the government of the Republic of China on Taiwan, signed a memorandum of understanding in Cambridge on April 29 to affirm their intention to develop and conduct an executive training program for senior officials of the Republic of China government who are involved in Taiwans participation in the World Trade Organization (WTO).

  • HLS fetes 50 years of women graduates:

    A standing-room-only crowd of graduates, professors, and students packed Ames Courtroom last Saturday (May 3) to listen to their distinguished colleagues discuss the experience of women at Harvard Law School (HLS) over the past five decades. The gathering was part of Celebration 50, the Law Schools commemoration of the 50th anniversary of its first female graduates.

  • ‘Salaam Cambridge!’:

    Indian film director Mira Nair 79 spoke Saturday (May 3) in Sanders Theatre, discussing her early struggles as a documentary filmmaker, the making of her acclaimed fiction films, her efforts to help Indian street children, and her artistic philosophy.

  • Reconstruction of Iraq holds key to future terrorism fight

    The outcome of efforts to both reconstruct Iraq and to resolve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict will influence the level of worldwide terrorist activity in the years to come, the German ambassador to the United Nations said Wednesday (May 7).

  • A ‘safe place’:

    Emotions ran high in Divinity Hall as activists on both sides of the Palestinian-Israeli conflict gathered together for an attempt at Dialogue in the Midst of Conflict. The civil but often tense panel discussion – part of the Women, Religion and Social Change II conference sponsored by the Pluralism Project at Harvard University – was moderated by Alma Abdul-Hadi Jadallah, herself a Palestinian, a certified mediator, and a doctoral candidate at George Mason Universitys Institute for Conflict Resolution. Jadallah invited panelists and audience members to consider other points of view, find common ground, and seek mutual understanding. She sought to ease anxieties and cool tempers by pronouncing the event a safe place.

  • Harvard Foundation honors race relations efforts

    The Harvard Foundation for Intercultural and Race Relations honored 40 students and three house masters at its annual awards dinner on April 29 at Quincy House. Dean of Harvard College and Quincy House Associate Harry R. Lewis, who delivered the keynote speech, received a surprise award from President Lawrence H. Summers, and the students and faculty of the Harvard Foundation, for his generous support of the foundation’s work.

  • HUCTW to host ‘family’ open house

    In conjunction with the Harvard Union of Clerical and Technical Workers (HUCTWs) recent online housing survey, an open house will be held May 17 for members of the Harvard community to learn about affordable housing. The event, which will run from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Middle East Restaurant in Central Square, marks the unions first housing-related open house and coincides with HUCTWs 15th anniversary.

  • Hastings, Mathis elected to NAS

    The National Academy of Sciences (NAS) elected 72 new members last month, including Harvard faculty members J. Woodland Hastings, Paul C. Mangelsdorf Professor of Natural Sciences, and Diane J. Mathis, professor of medicine, Joslin Diabetes Center. Members are elected in recognition of their distinguished and continuing achievements in original research.

  • Eating less and living longer:

    Cutting back dramatically on calories leads to a longer life, at least for species ranging from yeast to rats. But whether not eating the pudding gives the same advantage to humans has yet to be proven.

  • Cellular discipline:

    Andrew Murray stands before his audience on April 30, a pingpong ball in hand. Not to play in a tournament, but to illuminate a point. The professor of molecular and cellular biology is giving a talk in the Science Center about cells and their chromosomes.

  • Junior 24 elected to Phi Beta Kappa

    On May 15, 2003, 24 Harvard College juniors will be inducted into Alpha Iota of Massachusetts, the Harvard chapter of Phi Beta Kappa. The juniors, who were elected to the undergraduate honor society on April 11, will participate in a dinner ceremony confirming their membership in the 223-year-old chapter.

  • Conference looks at future of American global leadership

    Driven by its unmatched military might but undermined by increasing global interdependence and by the structure of American democracy itself, America is embarked on an unfamiliar journey to world empire.

  • STAGE debuts with talk, pizzazz:

    Its common knowledge that the United States is in the thick of a funding crisis for the arts. Less well understood is how the lack of funds affects arts education and still lesser known is how these consequences differ from urban to suburban school districts. These issues were tackled by a panel last Monday (May 5) at An Evening for Art, the debut event of Harvard STAGE, a student organization that aims to tap performance talents of university students to forge alliances with Boston Public School students.

  • Lowell House rings in the May

    Summer is a-coming and the winter is away-o, sang Lynn the Fool just after dawn on Thursday (May 1). The bells on her jesters cap jingled as she entertained several dozen students from Lowell House, gathered on the Weeks Footbridge to celebrate May Day with their traditional waltz.

  • Much ado about much ado

    Its here again, and it is SO welcome after a winter when at times even the arts seemed to be sleeping. Well, they woke with a banner and a flourish. The banner hung behind a series of class acts on the Holyoke Center stage, including tuneful troubadours and academic a cappella singers. The flourishes were everywhere, from the leaps of ballet dancers at Lowell House to the mischievous machinations of jesters on the steps of the Memorial Church in Much Ado About Nothing to the fabulous fable of the princess and the pea. Final Score: Arts First, Second, Third.

  • In brief

    Oxford Street benefit concert Oxford Street Cooperative, the University’s affiliated day care, is sponsoring an afternoon concert for children and adults on May 17 at the House of Blues. Starting…

  • University lifts travel moratorium for Singapore; policy remains in effect for China, Hong Kong, Taiwan

    Harvard University has lifted its moratorium on travel to Singapore, based on travel advice from the Centers for Disease Control (CDC), effective May 6. The University on April 30 lifted its travel moratorium for Vietnam and Toronto, Canada, based on travel advice from the World Health Organization (WHO).

  • FAS announces Cabot Fellows

    William C. Kirby, Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, has announced this years Walter Channing Cabot Fellows. Chosen for their eminence in history, literature or art, this years Fellows are Svetlana Boym, Curt Hugo Reisinger Professor of Slavic Languages and Literature and professor of comparative literature Jorie Graham, Boylston Professor of Rhetoric and Oratory Evelyn Higginbotham, professor of history and Afro-American Studies Richard Moran, Brian D. Young Professor of Philosophy Eric Rentschler, professor of German and Maria Tatar, John L. Loeb Professor of Germanic Languages and Literatures and Harvard College Professor.

  • American Academy names 13

    The American Academy of Arts and Sciences recently announced its newly elected fellows and foreign honorary members. Among this years class of 187 fellows and 29 foreign honorary members – honored for their achievements in business, science, and the arts – are 13 Harvard faculty members.

  • Ten feet high

    With the temperature over 80 degrees a while back, it was time for these Harvard students lounging by the Memorial Church to remove the shoes.

  • HMS center launches minority faculty fellowship program

    The Harvard Medical School (HMS) Center of Excellence in Minority Health and Health Disparities has launched a faculty fellowship program designed to promote and support the careers of exceptional underrepresented minority junior faculty. The two-year, nondegree-granting program provides specific funding intended to assist participants with their professional development as faculty member researchers and clinician/teachers at HMS and its affiliated hospitals, centers, and institutes. The faculty fellows will focus on and expand the field of work in minority health, and, over time, improve the capacity of the health-care system to address the needs of minority and disadvantaged populations.

  • Extension School class closes distance:

    What would be the opposite of social justice? Gregory Nagy asked his Extension School Introduction to Greek Literature class last Thursday (May 1) evening.

  • New ways found to fight anthrax:

    Two Eureka! moments in a Harvard University laboratory have led to new ways to neutralize deadly anthrax bacteria released in bioterrorist attacks.