Campus & Community

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  • Geri Barney:

    If I just stay here near the road that is made for me…

  • Boys Choir of Harlem to participate in residency:

    The Boys Choir of Harlem, the internationally acclaimed performing ensemble of the Choir Academy of Harlem, will participate in a residency at Harvard Feb. 4-8.

  • Meat consumption may not impact breast cancer risk:

    While for years it has been hypothesized that meat consumption is associated with breast cancer, a new study from Brigham and Womens Hospital (BWH) provides compelling evidence that diets high in animal protein may not be significantly associated with breast cancer risk. This finding is the latest result from the landmark BWH-based Nurses Health Study, and will appear in the Jan. 9 online issue of the International Journal of Cancer.

  • Nature, meet culture

    A snow-encrusted glove, brand name and all, adorns (?) the branches of a hardy tree outside Wadsworth House.

  • Arch glance

    Sever Halls curved doorway proffers a dynamic frame for this view of forked paths meandering off toward University Hall.

  • Residency requirement changed to enhance flexibility for new models of learning:

    A minor change to rules governing residency requirements for Harvard degrees enhances the Universitys flexibility to explore different models of learning, the Presidents Office announced. The change permits certain exceptions to the Universitys requirement that students must spend one full year in residency in order to receive a degree.

  • SPH launches new Web sites:

    The School of Public Health (SPH) has launched a new window onto its e-world with a redesigned home page that aims to direct visitors more quickly to where they want to go – for instance, a new Nutrition Source Web site unveiled this month that presents the latest scientific findings on nutrition and diet.

  • Hail and farewell:

    It is to be hoped that James Cuno isnt the kind of person who hates goodbyes, because the one he got was a doozy.

  • ‘If I were the Carpenter Center and you were an ingenious VES student:

    The space is dark, cold, and difficult to access, a little like a suburban basement with two walls removed. But Christopher Parlato saw exciting possibilities in this dismal enclosure.

  • Anthony G. Athos dies at 68:

    Anthony George Athos, a scholar, author, and consultant widely recognized by colleagues as an outstanding teacher-lecturer, died Nov. 29 in San Francisco after a long illness. He was 68.

  • Strong Women, Strong Girls:

    Lindsay Hyde 04 knows firsthand the impact of a strong female role model. She credits her impressive resume – which includes launching and developing curricula for not one but two public service organizations before she graduated from high school – to her mother.

  • Pros and cons of Native gaming eyed:

    Up until the 1980s, the San Manuel Band of Mission Indians of Highland, Calif., were dirt poor, with a 75 percent unemployment rate. The tiny tribe lived on a reservation of 740 acres in the San Bernardino hills, mostly in mud huts without electricity or running water.

  • Human rights committee seeks nominations for Scholars at Risk:

    The University Committee on Human Rights Studies, with the support of President Lawrence H. Summers, has launched an initiative to assist scholars who face persecution in their home countries. Every year, the committee provides a Scholars at Risk fellowship for at least one persecuted scholar to come to Harvard for up to a year. The risk of persecution may be related to the scholars work, ethnicity, religion, or political opinions. Writers, public intellectuals, and scholars, from any discipline represented at Harvard are eligible, and will be hosted as visiting fellows in the appropriate academic department. An interdisciplinary faculty committee reviews nominations and selects the scholar.

  • Faculty of Arts and Sciences Standing Committees — 2002-2003

    Upon the recommendation of the Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, the President approved and announced the following Standing Committees at the F.A.S. Faculty Meeting of Oct. 15, 2002. Standing Committees of the Faculty are constituted to perform a continuing function. Each committee has been established by a vote of the Faculty, and can be dissolved only by a vote of the Faculty or, with the agreement of a particular Committee, by the Dean and Faculty Council. The Dean recommends the membership of each committee annually.

  • Walkin’ wavy

    Navigation around campus became more challenging when the snow started round about Dec. 5. Forecasters say its expected to let up before June.

  • Perilous time for Afghan women:

    The hope for a better future and a break from strife that many Afghans felt with the toppling of the Taliban regime has been replaced with the reality that a difficult climb to that future lies ahead, a climb even more difficult for Afghanistans women.

  • Charter competition questioned:

    A study by two Harvard Law School researchers provides evidence that the vigorous competition among states over corporate charters – competition that many believe prompts rules that benefit shareholders – is largely a myth. This evidence has led the researchers to call for federal law to provide a federal incorporation option, as well as to enable shareholders to initiate and vote to approve corporate reincorporation to a different jurisdiction. The study – by Professor Lucian Bebchuk and Olin Fellow Assaf Hamdani – will soon appear in the Yale Law Journal.

  • Testosterone drives away the blues:

    Harrison Pope, a professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School, was looking for a few good men with severe depression and low levels of testosterone.

  • This month in Harvard history

    Jan. 1, 1920 – The Harvard football team scores a 7-6 win over Oregon in the Crimson’s only appearance at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena, Calif. Jan. 12-13, 1921 –…

  • Police reports

    Following are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department (HUPD) through Jan. 3. The official log is located at 1033 Massachusetts Ave., sixth floor.

  • Newsmakers

    AESC awards Bartlett Christopher A. Bartlett, Thomas D. Casserly Jr. Professor of Business Administration at Harvard Business School, and Professor Sumantra Ghoshal of London Business School have won the 2002…

  • Sleeping giants attack!:

    Following a trio of nightmarish defeats to Boston College, Richmond, and the Virginia Military Institute, Harvards sleeping giants were more than a little stirred in the Crimsons league opener against Dartmouth (4-7, 0-1 Ivy) this past Saturday (Jan. 4), lifting the mens basketball team past the Big Green, 67-50.

  • Brian Sinclair dies at 62:

    Brian Sinclair 62, a Harvard employee for three decades and co-host of the popular Hillbilly at Harvard radio program on WHRB since 1966, died Dec. 28 after battling leukemia. He was 62.

  • Fish twice a month reduces risk of stroke

    Researchers from the School of Public Health studying the role of fish consumption and risk of stroke among men have found that men who eat fish as little as twice per month significantly reduce their risk for ischemic stroke compared with men who eat fish less often or not at all. The findings are in the Dec. 25, 2002, issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association.

  • Bust a study break:

    For most of the 1,400 freshmen who joined President Lawrence H. Summers at the first-ever Reading Period Study Break in Annenberg Hall Monday night (Jan. 6), it was the food – sumptuous displays of decadent desserts and a veritable mountain of nachos – that lured them away from their books and papers.

  • Researchers debate origin of language:

    If chickens could talk, would they have anything interesting to say? Most scholars think not. But Marc Hauser, a Harvard professor of psychology, disagrees with them.

  • Five Harvard students selected as 2003 Rhodes Scholars :

    Thinking outside the box seems to have given Harvard students the edge in the Rhodes Scholarship competition this year. Four Harvard College students and one from the Medical School received the prestigious award – more than from any other school. All of them are pursuing academic careers that are interdisciplinary and unconventional.

  • ‘Tis the season:

    Lewie Remele 06 hangs holiday decorations inside his dorm room in Grays Hall.

  • This month in Harvard history

    Dec. 3, 1948 – The 110-member Harvard University Band makes its second appearance at Symphony Hall, Boston. The program features well-known marches and traditional band music, along with works by…

  • A letter from President Summers:

    Dear Colleagues, I am writing to bring to your attention a Harvard initiative concerning scholars who face persecution…