Campus & Community

All Campus & Community

  • AI evolution: From tool to partner

    Scientists have found pain in the same brain circuits that give you pleasure. That wont make you cry until you laugh, but its likely to lead to better ways to measure and treat chronic pain.

  • SPH faculty votes not to accept tobacco funds

    Faculty members at the School of Public Health (SPH) voted Thursday (Jan. 24) not to accept research funding from tobacco manufacturers and their subsidiaries. Because of an incompatibility with the public health mission, such funds had not been accepted at the School as a general practice for a number of years. The vote puts current practice into official policy and is consistent with Harvard Universitys 13-year-old policy of not holding stock in tobacco companies.

  • Teach For America seeks seniors ready to make an immediate impact

    Teach For America seeks seniors ready to make an immediate impact

  • At Perkins School, tutoring is hands-on

    For a sighted person, blindness is a frightening prospect. Finding ones way, avoiding danger, interacting with strangers – without vision such tasks seem challenging to the point of insuperability.

  • Anthony Lewis named Lombard Lecturer

    A former New York Times columnist, an Israeli communication and government scholar, and a former Boston Globe editor will be among six visiting faculty and fellows at the Joan Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics and Public Policy at the Kennedy School of Government this semester.

  • Undergrad’s evolution isn’t random

    Like many first-year students, David Solá-Del Valle 04 came to Harvard with a number of goals. High on Solá-Del Valles to do list, however, was an item other freshmen might find a little daunting: landing a spot in a biology research lab.

  • Statement Regarding University Employment and Contracting Policies

    Statement Regarding University Employment and Contracting Policies

  • Pleasure, pain activate same part of brain

    Scientists have found pain in the same brain circuits that give you pleasure. That wont make you cry until you laugh, but its likely to lead to better ways to measure and treat chronic pain.

  • Better predictions for outcome of kids’ brain tumors

    A distinctive signature of genes turned on and off greatly improves predictions of who has the best chance of survival of the most common type of childhood malignant brain tumor, according to a new study by researchers at Childrens Hospital in Boston and their colleagues. If verified by other studies over the next several years, the gene expression profile may help children survive the malignant brain tumor with fewer serious side effects. The study also shows that medulloblastoma has key molecular differences from other brain tumors, which eventually may help researchers find more targeted treatment. The study is published in the Jan. 24 issue of the weekly journal Nature.

  • Researchers make Olympic predictions

    Researchers, one of them an undergraduate, have used economic analysis to analyse and predict participation and medal outcomes for the upcoming Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City.

  • ‘Sex’ and the ‘Sixth Sense’

    The Hasty Pudding Theatricals, the nations oldest dramatic organization, announced the recipients of the 2002 Woman and Man of the Year awards: Sarah Jessica Parker and Bruce Willis.

  • Students respond to the choices

    Shortly after the Hasty Pudding Club announced its Woman of the Year (Sarah Jessica Parker) and Man of the Year (Bruce Willis) on Monday (Jan. 28), students around campus shared their opinions of the picks with the Gazette.

  • School’s diversity mirrors world’s

    Exposure to students of several racial, ethnic, and economic groups is preparing Cambridge Rindge and Latin students well to face an increasingly diverse working world, according to a new Harvard…

  • Stephen Walt is named academic dean at KSG

    Stephen Walt is named academic dean at KSG

  • Teachers learn to survive, prevail

    Teachers learn to survive, prevail

  • Philosopher Robert Nozick dies at 63

    University Professor Robert Nozick, one of the late 20th centurys most influential thinkers, died on the morning of Jan. 23 at the age of 63. He had been diagnosed with stomach cancer in 1994.

  • Ernest J. Brown, emeritus law professor, dies at 95

    Ernest Joseph Brown, Langdell Professor of Law Emeritus, died in Fort Worth, Texas, on Dec. 31. He was 95.

  • Faculty council notice for jan. 23

    At its eighth meeting of the year, the Faculty Council discussed with Dean Harry Lewis (computer science and Harvard College) proposed changes in the rules for Advanced Standing and Advanced Placement.

  • Toto beware!

    Alfred (left) and Georgia, two hungry hawks who haunt the Holyoke Center, perch on their 10th floor lookout ledge keeping their sharp eyes peeled for small game.

  • This month in Harvard history

    Jan. 9, 1943 – To help alleviate a shortage of qualified teachers in mathematics and the physical sciences, the Graduate School of Education opens two 15-week retraining programs for experienced…

  • Recession takes toll on remodeling activity

    Remodeling expenditures by homeowners declined again in the fourth quarter of 2001. The drop in remodeling, according to the Remodeling Activity Indicator (RAI) devised by Harvards Joint Center for Housing Studies, reflects the slowing economy and reduced consumer spending. While spending has not fallen off precipitously, we are in the midst of a modest downturn, remarked Nicolas P. Retsinas, the director of the Joint Center. In light of the reality of the recession, homeowners have begun to defer and cancel major housing renovations.

  • In Brief

    HBSs Michael Watkins to discuss anti-terror coalition on Jan. 30

  • Police reports

    Following are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department for the week ending Saturday, Jan. 19.

  • Newsmakers

    Catalan government honors Professor Bisson

  • A voice for the wilderness

    The world is on the road to becoming a barren, overcrowded, and lonely place for humanity, but famed biologist Edward O. Wilson is optimistic we will alter our path and emerge better stewards of the Earth, its creatures, and by doing so, ourselves.

  • Spalding Gray works magic at Sanders

    In the spirit of his signature confessional monologues, Spalding Gray told a nearly full house at Sanders Theatre that not long ago, he thought he was out of stories. He expected to settle down in Long Island, a life-modifying venture that was the subject of his monologue Morning, Noon and Night, which premiered in 1999. The gonzo New Yorker had become a bona fide family man, raising four children with his present wife, Kathie Russo.

  • American Historical Association honors Keyssar

    Alexander Keyssar, the Matthew W. Stirling Jr. Professor of History and Social Policy at the Kennedy School of Government, received the Albert J. Beveridge Award at the 116th annual meeting of the American Historical Association (AHA) on Jan. 4 in San Francisco.

  • Meet Linda Spencer

    Its not the destination, its the journey.

  • Reading ancient textiles

    Hidden away in the storerooms of the Peabody Museum are nearly 5,000 ancient Peruvian textile pieces, perhaps the largest such collection outside Lima.

  • Rockefeller Center names grant winners

    The David Rockefeller Center for Latin American Studies has awarded 23 grants to Harvard students with research projects in Latin America. These travel grants support academic research to be conducted as part of a regular Harvard thesis degree program, such as a senior honors thesis, dissertation, or a professional school thesis-equivalent.