He has a room named after him. And a cajun-spiced burger in the cafeteria. But Ronnie Levesque isnt a movie star, a rock singer, or any other kind of celebrity. Hes the superintendent of Quincy House.
Shareholder Responsibility report is now available The 2002 Annual Report of the Corporation Committee on Shareholder Responsibility (CCSR), a subcommittee of the president and fellows, is now available upon request…
An explosive third quarter lifted the Harvard football team past Yale on Nov. 23, to hand the Crimson a 20-13 Harvard Stadium victory in the 119th playing of The Game. Facing 35-mph winds, Harvard activated its ground attack in scoring a trio of touchdowns in the third quarter to overwhelm the Elies. Harvard finished its season 7-3, 6-1 Ivy, to claim second place in the league, while Penn snatched the title outright, blanking Cornell, 31-0.
The number of applicants for Early Action admission to Harvard College has risen 24 percent above last years record 6,128 to a total of 7,615. The academic quality of the pool is impressive. For example, 64 percent of the applicants average 1,400 or more on the combined SAT verbal and math test.
Lawrence H. Summers, president of Harvard University, and William C. Kirby, dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences (FAS), announced today that W.E.B. Du Bois Professor of the Humanities Henry Louis Skip Gates Jr., will continue as chair of the Afro-American Studies Department and director of the W.E.B. Du Bois Institute for Afro-American Research at Harvard University.
Members of the Harvard faculty and community, including President Lawrence H. Summers, joined the Harvard Islamic Society Nov. 22 at sunset at the groups Faculty Iftar, or communal breaking of the fast of Ramadan.
Corn, butterflies, and the media were center stage at the John F. Kennedy School of Government Nov. 21 at a conference that examined the medias role in keeping the public informed – or frightened – about the growing presence of biotechnology in food production.
The Jewish Student Association and the Middle East and North Africa Club at the Business School sponsored a Dec. 3 debate called America, Israel, and the Arab World: Can There Be Reconciliation? The event was held at the Spangler Auditorium on the Business School campus. Speaking that evening were writer and talk show host Rabbi Shmuley Boteach (center), Felix Frankfurter Professor of Law Alan Dershowitz (right), and Hasan Abdel Rahman (left), chief Palestinian negotiator in the United States. Hussein Ibish (not pictured), communications director for the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee, also spoke. Associate Professor of Business Administration Michael Watkins moderated the debate, which continued informally after the formal proceedings ended. (Staff photo by Stephanie Mitchell)
An aging global population presents a demographic nightmare that will have fewer working young people supporting larger numbers of retirees, raising the specter of fiscal deficits, economic stagnation, and a decline in the global position of todays Western powers.
In anticipation of World AIDS Day (Dec. 1), AIDS researchers and policy-makers from around Harvard gathered Nov. 25 to present their work and discuss strategies to address the devastating AIDS epidemic in sub-Saharan Africa. Harvard Programs on AIDS in Africa: A University Responds, sponsored by the Harvard AIDS Institute and held at the School of Public Healths Snyder Auditorium, highlighted the significant and specific ways that Harvards resources are being plied to combat AIDS in Botswana, Nigeria, Senegal, South Africa, and Tanzania.
The Harvard-Radcliffe Chorus (HRC), with its 130-plus members drawn from Harvard students, faculty, staff, and the community at large, is not the Universitys most elite musical ensemble. Founded in 1979 as a training choir for students aiming for some of the more selective choral groups, it continues to serve that purpose while also catering to its many members for whom a lower-key musical experience fits the bill.
Noel Fahey, Irelands ambassador to the United States, visited Harvard Nov. 20 as a guest of the Celtic Department. Fahey, who served formerly as ambassador to Germany, presented his credentials to President Bush in Sept. of this year.
The World Economic Forum (WEF) has announced that Srivatsa Krishna, a masters of business administration degree candidate at Harvard Business School where he is currently on sabbatical, has been selected to the 2003 class of Global Leaders For Tomorrow (GLT). Each year, after an impartial and extensive global consultation and nomination process, WEF selects 100 leaders – from both the corporate and public sectors – who will help shape the future of the world.
How does the sun shine? John Bahcall, visiting professor of astrophysics at Princeton University and Richard Black Professor of Natural Sciences at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, N.J., will explain on Wednesday (Dec. 11) at 4 p.m. His talk is the first in the Super Cluster Lecture Series at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study
A computer technology that already shows people what the world looks like has the power to help transform it into a better, more sustainable, and easier-to-manage place, speakers at a symposium on Geographical Information Systems said last month.
Emily Mann, artistic director of the McCarter Theatre Center in Princeton, N.J., will give a lecture titled Documentary Theater on Monday (Dec. 9) at 4 p.m. This event, the second in the Deans Lecture Series at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, is co-sponsored by the American Repertory Theatre.
Standing in front of the row of homes on Hano Street in Allston where she has lived since 1966, Minnie Walcott paused for a moment as her voice thickened with tears. I raised three daughters here, and now my grandchildren come back to visit me, she told the crowd assembled to celebrate the recent renovation of the affordable rental units. This means a lot to me.
Researchers at Brigham and Womens Hospital (BWH) have found that children with a family history of asthma or allergies may face significantly higher risk of persistent wheezing and asthma later in childhood when bottle-fed in the bed or crib before sleep time. These findings are published in the Dec. 2 issue of the Journal of the American Academy of Pediatrics.
Harold Howe II, U.S. commissioner of education during the Johnson administration and senior lecturer emeritus at the Graduate School of Education (GSE), died Nov. 29 in Hanover, N.H. He was 84.
The Kennedy School of Governments Forum of Public Affairs at Harvard University will be named in honor of John F. Kennedy Jr., announced Kennedy School Dean Joseph S. Nye Jr. The Kennedy School Forum, which will be renovated during the summer of 2003 through a gift from the Institute of Politics (IOP), will be dedicated in the fall of next year.
More than 300 children and their families filled the galleries of the Sackler Museum on a recent Saturday (Nov. 23) to learn about ancient fun and games and entertainment. They listened to the Japanese Tales of Genji told by Cambridge librarian Daryl Mark, knelt on the floor to play the Roman game of Knucklebones, watched 8- and 9-year-old Indian dancers gracefully perform a dance about an Indian drum called dholak, and constructed ancient Egyptian rattles called sistrums from a variety of materials – including coat hangers, washers, pipe cleaners, and tabs from soda cans.
I underwent radiation treatment for prostate cancer in 1996, so I was startled to come across a recent report that predicts who among men like myself would still be alive after 10 years.
According to a report taken by the Massachusetts State Police, on Nov. 20, between approximately 6:40 and 6:50 p.m., a Harvard undergraduate was the victim of an armed robbery in JFK Park. The student reported that while he was walking through the park, three individuals asked him the time and then assaulted him. One of the suspects produced a knife, threatened the student, and demanded his wallet.
Harvard President Lawrence H. Summers met with Francisco Santos, vice president of Colombia, on Nov. 22. Santos (seated) signs the guest book in Massachusetts Hall as Summers looks on. (Staff photo by Kris Snibbe)
HBS professor named book prize recipient The Harriman Institute at Columbia University has named Rawi Abdelal, assistant professor of business administration at Harvard Business School, the recipient of the 2002…
Hitting the hardwood running, the Harvard womens basketball team – picked by the pundits as the official team to beat in the Ivies – took its first spill of the season on Dec. 1, dropping a 84-44 decision to No. 7 Vanderbilt. Playing in the title game of the First Tennessee Tournament in Nashville, the overwhelmed Crimson trailed by 27 points to close out the half. The team shot just 24 percent from the field on the afternoon.
If the Harvard Gazette ever decides to send me to Amsterdam as a correspondent for Dutch affairs, I want to live in the Borneo Sporenburg residential development.
The environment was his passion, both professionally and privately. Scott Sandberg, 32, a building services coordinator for four years at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, was killed Friday (Nov. 29) in a surprise avalanche at Tuckerman Ravine on New Hampshires Mount Washington.