Following are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department (HUPD) for the week ending Sept. 28. The official log is located at 1033 Massachusetts Ave., sixth floor.
President Lawrence H. Summers offers Mary Yacubian a birthday greeting. Yacubian, who celebrated her 87th birthday on Oct. 1, has worked at Harvard since 1959. The former Massachusetts Hall receptionist now helps with filing for the president and the provost.
Its the largest collection of brains in the world. No, not Harvard University, but a small room at McLean Hospital where row upon row of plain metal shelves with Tupperware containers that hold more than 5,000 brains.
Russian Academy elects Lamberg-Karlovsky C.C. Lamberg-Karlovsky, the Stephen Phillips Professor of Archaeology and Ethnology, was elected to the Russian Academy of Sciences and conferred an honorary doctorate of science on…
The Harvard mens tennis team played host to a crowd of racketeers this past weekend (Sept. 27-29) at the Beren Tennis Center. The three-day Harvard Fall Invitational gave teams from as far away as Alabama, Notre Dame, and the University of Nevada, Las Vegas (not to mention Ivy neighbors Brown and Princeton), an opportunity to test out their singles lineups and doubles combinations in the early going of the season. Though, even as the schools served up some serious competition, only the results from individual singles and doubles counted toward national and regional rankings.
‘Celebrating Community Spirit,’ the Fourth Annual Benefit Concert for the Cambridge Housing Assistance Fund (CHAF), was held on Sept. 27 at Sanders Theatre. Kansas City blues singer (left) Paul Broadnax belts one out with Grammy nominee and nine-time Boston Music Award winner Rebecca Parris. Parris, who was the headliner at this fundraiser for the homeless, was accompanied by the 16-piece Kenny Hadley Big Band. CHAF’s first three concerts raised over $300,000 to assist more than 270 homeless and near-homeless families with the start-up costs of renting an apartment.
Charlie Connor was at home one night about a month ago when a call came in from Harvards Operations Center, saying that a racket coming from Coolidge Hall had prompted a neighbor to complain.
Though much of the inequity in world health stems from differences in wealth – both within and between countries – several experts say that health disparities could be reduced through wise government policies even as income disparities persist.
As he conducted a search for a new dean of the Graduate School of Education (GSE), President Lawrence H. Summers was fond of describing the School as uniquely central to the mission of the University: Although Harvard trains doctors and lawyers and managers, the business of the University is not medicine or law or business. Harvard exists for education.
The John F. Kennedy School of Government (KSG) has announced the third grant cycle for the Kuwait Program Research Fund. With generous support from the Kuwait Foundation for the Advancement of Sciences, a KSG faculty committee will consider applications for small one-year grants (up to $30,000) to support advanced research by Harvard University faculty members on issues of critical importance to Kuwait and the Persian Gulf. Grants can be applied toward research assistance, travel, summer salary, and course buyout.
A month into the fall term in the houses, the new paint smell has dissipated and shoes, posters, and CDs have found suitable resting places. But for residents of five houses, freshness remains, as new Allston Burr Senior Tutors in Cabot, Currier, Dunster, Kirkland, and Lowell houses acquaint themselves with their new jobs and with the students they serve.
An assistant Secretary General of the UN (on sabbatical), the most recent U.S. ambassador to Mexico, and President Kennedys advisor and speechwriter, are among those who have been chosen for fellowships this fall at the Kennedy School of Governments Institute of Politics (IOP). In all, six leading professionals have been selected to spend the fall semester at IOP as resident fellows. Two visiting fellows, Susan Hirschmann, recently departed chief-of-staff to U.S. House Majority Whip Tom DeLay, and Jim Wallis, co-founder of Sojourners magazine, which focuses on religion, politics, and culture, will lead short-term discussion groups with students.
An editor of a feminist journal in Iran, a peace and disarmament correspondent, and the former editor in chief of the Financial Times are among the fellows at the Kennedy Schools Joan Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics and Public Policy this semester.
Harvard undergraduate students, working with their professors, are developing a new technology for treating tuberculosis (TB). The new system delivers drugs through an inhaler, increasing the likelihood that patients will take them over longer periods, and reducing the side effects of pills and injections. To test and market the system, the group has formed a nonprofit corporation called MEND (MEdicine in NeeD).
At its second meeting of the year, the Faculty Council met with William R. Fitzsimmons (dean of Admissions and Financial Aid) and Marilyn McGrath Lewis (director of Admissions) to discuss issues surrounding Early Action and Early Admissions.
Sept. 25, 1929 – At the dedication of the Law School’s Langdell Hall, Harvard confers honorary Doctor of Laws degrees upon two legal scholars from Cambridge University: William Warwick Buckland and Percy Henry Winfield.
Following are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department (HUPD) for the week ending Sept. 21. The official log is located at 1033 Massachusetts Ave., sixth floor.
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:
Former U.N. weapons inspector Scott Ritter said he would be willing to fight and die in a war against Iraq, as long as the United States played by international rules and attacked only after a fair inspection process revealed Baghdad had resumed production of biological, chemical, or nuclear weapons.
The town of Watertown and Harvard University announced that after a year and a half of extensive negotiations, an agreement has been reached that will provide the town with a guaranteed revenue stream from the Arsenal on the Charles Property.
As a young boy in Calabria, Italy, Joe Calautti spent half his days in grammar school, the other half as an apprentice tailor, learning by watching the master tailors at their work.
The return on Harvard University’s endowment was relatively flat during the 2001-2002 fiscal year, with investment returns dipping 0.5 percent despite what Harvard Management Company President and Chief Executive Officer Jack Meyer termed a
Though it may not have been as pretty as usual, the Harvard football team scored a perfect 10 this past Saturday (Sept. 21) at the Stadium, holding off the high-flying Holy Cross Crusaders, 28-23, to claim their 10th consecutive victory over two seasons. And in spite of the seven penalties for 55 yards, or the fourth-quarter nail-biting, Harvard opened its 2002 season exhibiting the same poise that marked last year’s 9-0 campaign.
The Joint Program on Religion and Public Life at the Hauser Center for Nonprofit Organizations at the Kennedy School of Government (KSG) is sponsoring a research colloquium series beginning Oct. 3. The series, which will run through Dec. 5, aims to discuss the work of leading scholars who address the interaction of religion and public policy in the United States. Sponsors of the colloquium hope to connect and encourage graduate students working on related topics, and to strengthen the links between institutional centers of activity devoted to research and practice in this area.
Though it may not have been as pretty as usual, the Harvard football team scored a perfect 10 this past Saturday (Sept. 21) at the Stadium, holding off the high-flying Holy Cross Crusaders, 28-23, to claim their 10th consecutive victory over two seasons. And in spite of the seven penalties for 55 yards, or the fourth-quarter nail-biting, Harvard opened its 2002 season exhibiting the same poise that marked last year’s 9-0 campaign.