Campus & Community

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  • This month in Harvard history

    March 1, 1944 – The Harvard Police begin wearing visored caps and dark blue uniforms like those of regular Cambridge and Boston policemen. Standard apparel had been plain clothes since…

  • Police reports

    Following are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department (HUPD) for the week ending March 10. The official log is located at Police Headquarters, 29 Garden…

  • Armed robbery on Oxford Street is reported

    An assistant professor was the victim of an armed robbery on Oxford Street near Garfield Street this past Thursday (March 8) at 10:30 p.m. The suspect, described below, approached the…

  • After school is a time for learning

    Giving kids something constructive to do between the time school lets out and the time their parents come home is the aim of a new $23 million partnership involving Harvard, the city of Boston, and nine other nonprofit and for-profit institutions.

  • ‘Africana’ to be donated to Sub-Saharan libraries

    Hundreds of libraries in communities across Sub-Saharan Africa will receive donated copies of “Africana: The Encyclopedia of the African and African-American Experience.” The comprehensive encyclopedia on black history and culture…

  • George Steiner named Norton Professor

    Writer, scholar, and critic George Steiner has been named the 2001-02 Charles Eliot Norton Professor of Poetry at Harvard. He will deliver the Norton Lectures at the University next fall and plans to examine the act of teaching, from the Platonic Socrates to Wittgenstein and Ionesco. Currently an Extraordinary Fellow of Churchill College at the University of Cambridge, Steiner is an internationally renowned scholar of Western culture, language, and intellectual history.

  • Surgery without scalpels:

    Rather than cut open a persons chest or abdomen, doctors can now insert a slender needle through the skin and destroy a tumor with heat, cold, or alcohol.

  • Fonda donates $12.5M to GSE:

    Actress Jane Fonda came to the Harvard Graduate School of Education (GSE) Friday, March 2, to announce her donation of $12.5 million to launch the Harvard Center on Gender and Education. It is the largest gift from a single individual the GSE has ever received.

  • Light illuminates better teaching strategies

    In 1986, Richard Light was asked a question that changed his life. He conducted more than 400 interviews and traveled to 90 college campuses seeking to answer it. Knowing that would not be enough, he enlisted dozens of colleagues and students to help gather data.

  • Q&A with Richard Light

    In 1986, Richard Light was asked a question that changed his life. He conducted more than 400 interviews and traveled to 90 college campuses seeking to answer it. Knowing that would not be enough, he enlisted dozens of colleagues and students to help gather data.

  • Daggy, 86, former SPH assistant dean

    Richard Daggy, assistant dean of the Harvard School of Public Health (SPH) from 1964 through 1966 and associate dean for international programs from 1966 to 1973, died on Jan. 21,…

  • Faculty Council notice for March 7

    At its 11th meeting of the year, the Council discussed with Dean Peter Ellison (GSAS and anthropology) the experimental summer English Language Program. Dean Ellison also briefed the Council on…

  • This month in Harvard history

    March 23, 1912 — The Boston Elevated Railway Co. opens the Harvard Square subway station. BERC expends about $10 million for the entire Cambridge subway project, which includes a special…

  • In Brief

    Children’s Initiative announces research awards In honor of Jerome Kagan, the Daniel and Amy Starch Research Professor of Psychology, The Harvard Children’s Initiative and the Mind/Brain/Behavior Initiative have announced research…

  • Police reports

    Following are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department (HUPD) for the week ending March 3. The official log is located at Police Headquarters, 29 Garden…

  • Nobel winner affirms the ‘self’

    During the Cultural Revolution – the decade of Maoist reform that, among other things, pilloried Chinese intellectuals and sent many to the countryside for re-education through hard labor – author Gao Xingjian was among those sent down to live the life of a peasant.

  • An operetta a day keeps doctors’ blues away

    Kristen Ammon has played bass since she was 9 years old. She studied music at Yale University and plays today for the Longwood Symphony Orchestra, which is practicing for its March 10 presentation of Tchaikovsky, Ellington, and Ives.

  • Casting a vote for election reform

    In the wake of six long weeks this fall filled with hanging chads, ballot recounts, and court challenges, it appears the American people may finally be willing to embrace major changes in the way we elect our government leaders. The question is, Is Washington ready? David King, associate professor in public policy at the Kennedy School of Government (KSG), is anxious to find out.

  • Prize to reward innovative ideas on mental health

    The University Student Health Coordinating Board has established a $1,500 prize for students who come up with the most innovative and practical ideas about how to encourage people suffering from depression to seek treatment.

  • Minority medical students at fellowship symposium

    Carlos Paz spent his childhood laboring in Californias grape fields. Today, the Harvard Medical student is conducting research on circadian rhythms.

  • Expert: Middle-class = middling health

    Citing a host of studies, surveys, and statistics, a British health expert made a compelling case last week that the link between low social status and poor health is not just a problem for the poor, but for people at all levels of society.

  • March whiteout descends

    In a rare respite from the March madness of classes and assignments, the campus fell into a quiet white reverie for two sweet days.

  • Mineral madness

    Eyes sparkling and imaginations aflame, area children – and their elders – glowed in a wealth of glitter and color at the Mineral Madness Family Festival at the Museum of Natural History last Saturday. Weird minerals, a scavenger hunt, mineral identification, and a (relatively inexpensive) Big Dig were some of the bright facets of the lively day.

  • NewsMakers

    Knoll receives Chang Ying-Chien Prize Fisher Professor of Natural History Andrew H. Knoll, an expert on the early evolution of life, has been named the first recipient of the Chang…

  • Cell development is reversed

    If the lizardy newt loses a leg in a battle with a stronger, faster rival, it simply grows a new limb.

  • Divinity School lightens loan load

    A $500,000 donation to Harvard Divinity School has led to the creation of a loan reduction program, an addition eagerly anticipated by students seeking ways to balance the financial conflicts of repaying heavy student loan debt and pursuing careers in typically low-paying public service jobs.

  • Indecent assault at Lamont Library

    On Friday, Feb. 23, at approximately 3:15 p.m., the Harvard University Police Department (HUPD) responded to a report of an indecent assault at the Lamont Library. The victim, not affiliated…

  • Attempted unarmed robbery at Leverett Towers Pathway

    A University graduate student was the victim of an attempted unarmed robbery while talking on his cellular phone on Wednesday, Feb. 21, at approximately 7:59 p.m., on the pathway behind…

  • New director of Carr Center named

    Author Michael Ignatieff, a professor of human rights policy, has been named director of the Carr Center of Human Rights Policy at the Kennedy School of Government, Dean Joseph S.…

  • Make sure your Diet Coke is the real thing

    On Thursday, Feb. 22, a member of the Harvard community purchased a 20-ounce bottle of Diet Coke that contained a foreign substance that made the person briefly ill. The bottle…