Campus & Community

All Campus & Community

  • Free speech flourishes

    Among recent gatherings on campus was a rally against war on Iraq (above) on Monday (Oct. 7), where Derrick N. Ashong, a Ph.D. candidate in Afro-American Studies, spoke. At the Law School – where, because of a threat to federal funding, military recruiters have recently been allowed access to the School – an Oct. 7 event organized by HLS LAMBDA protested the militarys stance toward gays and lesbians. HLS Dean Robert C. Clark (below) addressed the crowd. Commenting on the issue, President Lawrence H. Summers said, Generations of Harvard alumni have served with distinction in the U.S. armed forces. Consistent with the ideal of nondiscrimination, I believe that our gay and lesbian students and graduates should have that honorable opportunity as well. Military service is a noble and vitally important calling. Current federal policy not only denies openly homosexual individuals a crucial opportunity to serve their country, it denies all of us the benefit of their service in so important a cause.

  • Twin signals may hold key to breast cancer, guide intervention:

    Researchers from Harvard Medical School (HMS) have discovered that dual genetic signals are required to disrupt the framework of normal breast tissue during early tumor development. While most genes associated with breast cancer can only deliver one of those signals, one common breast cancer gene, HER2 (also called ErbB2), is able to provide both culprit signals.

  • Rosenthal is Morgan Chase Award finalist

    Assistant clinical professor of ophthalmology at Harvard Medical School Perry Rosenthal has been selected as a finalist for the JP Morgan Chase Health Award at the Tech Museum of Innovation Awards, presented by Applied Materials, Inc. The founder of the Massachusetts Eye and Ear Infirmarys Contact Lens Service, Rosenthal was elected for his involvement in the development of vision-rehabilitating contact lenses.

  • Web site saves wet books:

    In 1967 the Arno river overflowed its banks and Florence, Italy, became flooded. The rising water spelled disaster for many libraries and museums. Priceless books, manuscripts, and other objects were soaked. Many were ruined.

  • HMNH breaks out of its shell:

    The mother dinosaur in the Harvard Museum of Natural Historys new exhibit died crouching over her eggs protectively, probably in a Gobi Desert sandstorm, exhibiting parenting instincts that until recently scientists didnt believe she had.

  • Courting the Cambridge farm vote

    Courting the Cambridge farm vote

  • Spoked

    Photo feature

  • Harvard initiates new scholarships for Allston-Brighton:

    Harvard University will honor the legacy of a beloved member of the Allston-Brighton community with the new Brian Honan Scholarships, which offer to Boston municipal employees full tuition scholarships for Harvards Division of Continuing Education (DCE). Honan, a Boston city councilor representing Allston-Brighton, died suddenly in July at age 39.

  • Two are named University Professors:

    An economist who has conducted groundbreaking research on information technology and economic growth, energy and the environment, and applied econometrics, and a music scholar whose studies of Bach and Mozart have incorporated research in architecture, theology, medicine, and economics have both been named University Professors.

  • Berman named acting VP for finance

    Senior adviser to the dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences (FAS) Ann Berman has agreed to serve as acting vice president for finance while the search for a permanent successor to Elizabeth Beppie Huidekoper proceeds. Berman will assume her new role on Oct. 10.

  • Memorial services

    Robert Dorfman A memorial service for Robert Dorfman, David A. Wells Professor of Political Economy Emeritus, will be held at the Memorial Church on Oct. 9 at 2 p.m. The…

  • President and Provost office hours

    President Lawrence H. Summers and Provost Steven Hyman will hold office hours for students in their Massachusetts Hall offices from 4 to 5 p.m. (unless otherwise noted) on the following dates:

  • New chemistry medal is established:

    Theres no praise sweeter than that from ones colleagues, says Frank Westheimer, Morris Loeb Professor of Chemsitry Emeritus. After a lifetime of research, Westheimer, 90, has gotten this kind of sweet thrill to add to his many other laurels.

  • ‘Fitz’ sparks win

    With a brilliant outing from backup quarterback Ryan Fitzpatrick 05, the Harvard football team overcame a 12-point deficit to edge Brown, 26-24, this past Saturday (Sept. 28) at Brown Stadium. The win improved the Crimson to 2-0 on the season, while keeping the overall streak alive and well at 11 straight.

  • Walter H. Annenberg, Harvard benefactor, dies at 94

    Walter H. Annenberg, businessman, statesman, philanthropist, and Harvard benefactor whose donations helped finance undergraduate scholarships and the renovation of Annenberg Hall, died Tuesday (Oct. 1) at his home near Philadelphia from complications due to pneumonia. He was 94.

  • Claude Steele kicks off lecture series:

    Academic performance is a key benchmark in our society. Success or failure in this area can profoundly affect future opportunity, how we are perceived by others, and the way we see ourselves. Using 15 years of his own research to identify the unseen pressures affecting the academic performance of particular groups, Claude Steele, the Lucie Stern Professor in the Social Sciences at Stanford University, will discuss this knotty subject at the Agassiz House Theatre in the Radcliffe Yard on Oct. 10 at 4 p.m. The talk is free and open to the public.

  • In brief

    Thesis fellowship available from CSWR The Center for the Study of World Religions (CSWR) invites students enrolled in any Harvard doctoral program whose research involves the substantive study of religious…

  • Aga Khan inaugurates Web site:

    A huge electronic resource of materials on architecture, urbanism, landscape design, and related issues of concern to the Muslim world – and people interested in it – went online Sept. 27 when the presidents of Harvard and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (M.I.T.) came together with His Highness the Aga Khan to launch http://www.ArchNet.org.

  • Consortium awarded CDC grant to coordinate terror watch:

    The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) has awarded a $1.2 million grant to a consortium of investigators and health care organizations for a national bioterrorism syndromic surveillance demonstration program, a kind of computer early warning system that initially will sweep, in real time, 20 million patient records in all 50 states for clusters of symptoms associated with bioterror agents.

  • ‘Shaft is a bad mother- (Shut your mouth)’:

    An old joke asks the question, What do you call a 200-pound black man with a gun? The answer, of course, is Sir, the subtext being that it is only by physical intimidation that blacks can gain respect in the white world.

  • 250 years of enterprising women:

    The first publisher of the signed Declaration of Independence was a woman.

  • Office for the Arts announces fall 2002 grants

    The Office for the Arts (OFA) has announced that more than 700 Harvard students will participate in over 25 creative projects ranging from music and theater to literature and the cultural arts this fall semester. Sponsored in part through funding from the OFA, the grants, which range from $75 to $700, aim to foster creative and innovative artistic initiatives among Harvard undergraduates.

  • Patinkin counsels passion and patience:

    Im pretty fragile as a human being, Mandy Patinkin told a group of undergraduates who had come to hear him speak last Friday (Sept. 27) as part of the Office for the Arts Learning From Performers Series. Its ironic because I often play parts that are rather big – tough, strong. I do that to make believe.

  • Scholars in Medicine honors family, diversity

    The 50th Anniversary Program for Scholars in Medicine was established in 1995 to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the admission of women to the Medical School, to acknowledge the important contributions of women to the School, and to enhance the quality and diversity of the Faculty of Medicine at all ranks.

  • Daddy longlegs have a global reach:

    Theyre quite a bit uglier than Darwins celebrated Galapagos Islands finches. Uglier than a canary in a coal mine too.

  • ‘Bumper bike’

    Photo by Ruby Arguilla During the first annual ‘Commute Another Way Fall Fun Fair,’ Holly Bogle, manager of the Commuter Choice Program, demonstrates the new easy-to-use bicycle racks that will…

  • ‘Murder at Harvard’:

    The disappearance of a prominent Bostonian. Dismembered body parts in the bowels of Harvard Medical College. A trial that pitted a Harvard professor deeply in debt against a grave-digging janitor.

  • Faculty of Medicine – Memorial Minute:

    At a meeting of the Faculty of Medicine on May 29, 2002, the following Minute was placed upon the records.

  • Earth’s new center

    The outer core is liquid, the inner core is solid. That’s the way Earth has been depicted in textbooks for the past 66 years. But the work of Adam Dziewonski,…

  • This month in Harvard history

    Oct. 26, 1912 – The Boston Elevated Railway Co. opens Stadium Station on lower Boylston (now Kennedy) St. for the convenience of Saturday Harvard football crowds. Oct. 7, 1915 –…