Campus & Community

All Campus & Community

  • Students tackle parking problems

    Tough time parking in Harvard Square? Let the robot do it. That was the recommendation of a group of Harvard engineering students after a semester-long look at the difficulty of…

  • Six named Harvard College Professors

    Six professors have been named this year’s Harvard College Professors in recognition of their outstanding performance as undergraduate teachers and their exceptional work in graduate education and research. This year’s…

  • Gun lobby, labor unions flex muscle in 2000 campaign

    Both the nations gun lobby and labor unions flexed their political muscles in a major way during the 2000 election, although which had a greater impact on the outcome remains in dispute. A panel of experts discussed the role of special interests during a Kennedy School Forum on Thursday night, May 10.

  • Jolls is appointed professor of law

    Christine Jolls, a pioneer in the emerging field of behavioral law and economics, and a scholar of employment law, has been named a professor of law at Harvard Law School…

  • Bailey brings unity out of diversity

    After he receives his diploma on June 7, Adam Bailey will head to Washington, D.C., to work as a legislative assistant with the National Congress of American Indians, which represents 560 different Native American tribes across the nation.

  • Oldenburg named Overseers president

    Richard E. Oldenburg, A.B. ’54, has been elected President of the University’s Board of Overseers for 2001-02. He will assume the post after Commencement, succeeding Sharon Elliott Gagnon, A.M. ’65,…

  • Radcliffe appoints fellows

    Forty-four women and men have been named Radcliffe Institute Fellows for the upcoming academic year. At Radcliffe, each of these scholars, scientists, and artists will work individually and across disciplines…

  • Rudenstine honored by HUCE

    On Wednesday, May 9, the Harvard University Center for the Environment (HUCE) honored President Neil L. Rudenstine for his contributions to the field of environmental studies at Harvard. The event was hosted by Michael B. McElroy, director of HUCE and Gilbert Butler Professor of Environmental Studies, Timothy E. Wirth 61, Ed.M. 65, chair of the HUCE Advisory Board, and executive committee members.

  • A century of histrionic history

    The Harvard Theatre Collection is celebrating its 100th anniversary this month with an exhibition titled One Hundred Years, One Hundred Collections. The exhibition will showcase representative items from the collections holdings, which in their entirety touch upon every imaginable aspect of the performing arts. In addition to the mainstream genres of theater, dance, opera, and musical theater, there are valuable holdings in circus, magic, puppetry, fairgrounds, spectacles and festivals, music hall, film, minstrelsy, toy theater, and all manner of specialty performance.

  • Science sleuths

    There was a kidnapping in Science Center B on Friday, May 11. But thanks to the speedy forensic work of some elementary school students, the crime was solved by days end.

  • Unchartered Time for the American Child

    The percentage of mothers working outside the home has almost doubled in the United States since 1975. As a consequence, more American families than ever depend on nonmaternal care for…

  • The Long Road to College Access

    Education professor Bridget Terry Long, poised with an economists training, is zeroing in on an education question thats always intrigued her: What factors determine who goes to college and who does not?

  • Rudenstine’s journey to Harvard began at 14:

    At the age of 14, Neil Rudenstine set out on an epic journey. Physically, the distance was only a few miles, but in personal terms it was like traveling to another world.

  • In Brief

    Employment Office to host Career Forum The Employment Office will host Career Forum 2001 on Tuesday, June 12. This year’s event will be held from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.…

  • Muses’ return

    Imagine a time in the remote future when all that is known of our world is what archaeologists have been able to excavate from the rubble – a handful of tantalizing puzzles with most of the pieces missing.

  • Breast-fed babies less likely to be obese later

    More months on breast milk as infants may mean fewer pounds on older children and teens later, according to a Harvard Medical School study in the May 16 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association.

  • FAS admissions yield is close to 80 percent

    Bolstered by a financial aid program that has been expanded twice in the past two years, the yield on students admitted to the College remains at high levels not seen since the early 1970s. The high yield means that only a small number will be admitted from the waiting list over the next few weeks, and the final yield could exceed last years 78.9 percent.

  • Memorial Minute: Robert Harris Chapman

    At a meeting of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences on April 10, 2001, the following Minute was placed upon the records. Robert Harris Chapman, Professor of English Literature, playwright,…

  • Building Computerized Cathedrals for Learning

    Art historian, religious scholar, and computer virtuoso, James Moore has always been interested in the lessons that things-inanimate objects, that is-can teach. Now in the fourth year of his doctoral studies at HGSE, he has focused on a quintessentially modern medium: the Internet.

  • Teaching for Empathy

    Many Harvard students look at Mohammed Rehman every day, but they dont really see him. They may exchange a couple of dollars with him as they buy their morning paper at the Out of Town News stand in Harvard Square. But to truly see Mohammed Rehman, one must understand the country he left, his long and difficult journey to the United States, and the reason hes become a community leader here.

  • Breaking the Glass Ceiling…Online

    When Pam Whitehouse, an HGSE doctoral student and adjunct professor at the University of Massachusetts at Dartmouth, put her Womens Studies 101 course online four years ago, she got a lot of resistance from her colleagues. The Web didnt jibe with long-held ideologies that womens studies courses must focus on face-to-face discussion and community, said her critics.

  • Unlocking the Internet’s Library

    Here is a computer, and here is an assignment: log on and find out something interesting about Australia. Do you search using the key word Australia? Or do you search using Australia+money+food+school+sports+cooking+climate?

  • Math As a Civil Rights Issue:

    Robert Moses was a young man when he traveled from New York to Mississippi in the early 1960s. The voter registration movement he helped organize changed the political landscape of…

  • Getting into rhythms of Alzheimer’s disease

    By clocking the biorhythms of older people, researchers have come up with a way to tell if a person has Alzheimers disease. As new drugs and even a vaccine are developed for this personality-robbing disease, it becomes critically important to make sure these treatments are given to the right people.

  • Sit-in ends after 21 days

    Harvard President Neil L. Rudenstine yesterday announced the formation of a University-wide committee to consider principles and policies regarding the compensation and opportunities available to lower-wage employees and contracted workers at Harvard University. The committee, to be chaired by labor economist and Harvard faculty member Lawrence Katz, will consist of 10 additional faculty members, five Harvard staff members (three unionized employees and two senior administrators), and four students (two undergraduates and two graduate students) to be named by elected student councils.

  • Faculty Council Notice for May 9

    At its 14th meeting of the year, the Council discussed plans for a new University-wide sponsored grants management system with Elizabeth Huidekoper (vice president for finance) and Elizabeth Mora (director of sponsored research). Professor Paul Martin, Dean for Research and Information Technology (DEAS and physics), Cheryl Hoffman, Associate Dean for Finance in FAS, and Alan Long, senior project consultant in the Office of the Executive Dean, were present for this discussion.

  • Police reports

    Following are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department (HUPD) for the week ending Saturday, May 5. The official log is located at Police Headquarters, 29…

  • Internship attracts best and brightest

    Like most students at the Kennedy School of Government (KSG), John Daggett M.P.P. 01 is committed to the idea of working in the public sector. Someday, he believes, hed even consider running for public office. But the realities of launching a career in the federal government are causing him some consternation.

  • Two named to MacArthur board

    The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation has elected Kennedy School of Government (KSG) Research Fellow Mary Graham and former U.S. Deputy Attorney General Jamie S. Gorelick as members of the foundations board of directors.

  • Former KSG dean is elected to National Academy of Sciences

    Robert D. Putnam, Peter and Isabel Malkin Professor of Public Policy, has been named a new member of the National Academy of Sciences (NAS) in recognition of his distinguished achievements in original research. The announcement was made Tuesday, May 1, during the 138th annual meeting of the Academy in Washington, D.C.