Year: 2002

  • Campus & Community

    Environmental Info Center has new librarian, plans for future

    The Environmental Information Center (EIC) embarks on its seventh year with a new librarian, plans for influential collection expansion, and an intense commitment to interdisciplinary research.

    2 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    Glass Flowers bloom again at HMNH

    The Ware Collection of Blaschka Glass Models of Plants, better known as Harvards famed Glass Flowers, is back on display at the Harvard Museum of Natural History after a two-month absence while the gallery housing the treasures was remodeled.

    1 minute
  • Campus & Community

    Exhibit eyes environment policy

    The Environmental Information Center, a unit of the Harvard College Library, is mounting a special exhibition in preparation for the upcoming 2002 World Summit on Sustainable Development – a United Nations conference called to examine the first 30 years of environmental policy and to chart future strategies. People and the Planet: Forging International Environmental Policy,…

    1 minute
  • Campus & Community

    Bertini urges action on hunger

    Progress has been made in the worldwide fight against hunger but action is still needed to help the 777 million people who still dont have enough to eat, Catherine Bertini, the executive director of the United Nations World Food Programme, said Thursday (Feb. 7).

    3 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    Public service rewarded, encouraged at Kennedy School

    Third-year Suffolk University Law School student Peter Brown wants to help eradicate employment discrimination. Thanks in large measure to a Jerome Lyle Rappaport Charitable Foundation internship, which brought him this past summer to the Attorney Generals (AG) office in Boston, Brown is well on his way to his dream job with the Equal Employment Opportunity…

    4 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    Susanna, Figaro to wed at Dunster

    Poor Figaro! All he wants to do is marry his beloved Susanna and settle down, but look what he has to put up with – a lusty count with the hots for his wife-to-be, an older woman wholl forgive the money he owes her if hell marry her instead, a goofy young page whos infatuated…

    2 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    University librarian Foster McCrum Palmer dies at 87

    Foster McCrum Palmer, associate University librarian from 1966 until 1974, died on Feb. 2 at his home in Watertown. He was 87 years old. Palmers career in the Harvard libraries began in 1938 under the late Keyes Metcalf. In 1941, Palmer began his long service as senior reference librarian in Widener Library. He is acknowledged…

    1 minute
  • Campus & Community

    ‘Marat/Sade’ revived at Loeb

    An asylum full of lunatics and their brutal keepers take over the main stage of the Loeb Drama Center tomorrow night (Feb. 15). Its a theatrical experience that may give you nightmares, but youll also find yourself whistling the catchy tunes.

    5 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    Religious consciousness rises in U.S.

    On Sept. 15, four days after terrorist attacks in New York and Washington, D.C., Balbir Singh Sodhi, a Sikh immigrant from India, was shot to death while he worked on landscaping outside his Chevron station in Mesa, Ariz.

    4 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    ‘Caring for the Community’ looks at stress management

    No one said Harvard would be easy. Your roommate drives you crazy, you cant master that chemistry assignment, and its been weeks since youve slept through the night. In fact, youre quite certain the admissions office made a grievous error in inviting you here in the first place.

    5 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    In brief

    CSWR fellowship opportunity

    2 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    Lacan: Filling in the gaps

    For more than a dozen years, Judith Gurewich has been guiding Harvard students and faculty through the intricate terrain of structuralism, post-structuralism, Lacanian psychoanalysis, and other daunting regions of contemporary thought.

    6 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    Record numbers apply to College

    A record 19,520 students have applied for admission to the college this year for entrance to the Class of 2006 next September. For the 11th time in the past 12 years, applications rose. Last year, 19,014 students applied for admission 10 years ago 13,029 applied.

    4 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    President holds office hours

    President Lawrence H. Summers will hold office hours for students in his Massachusetts Hall office from 4 to 5 p.m. on the following dates: March 5 April 10 May 8…

    1 minute
  • Campus & Community

    Police reports

    Following are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department for the week ending Saturday, Feb. 9. The official log is located at 1033 Massachusetts Ave., sixth floor.

    1 minute
  • Campus & Community

    Bruce Willis to be roasted tonight

    This evening (Feb. 14) the toughest movie star in America will be roasted at the Hasty Pudding Man of the Year Awards. Actor Bruce Willis, who recently garnered critical raves for his work on the film Sixth Sense (and whose new movie, Harts War, will be released tomorrow), will be teased and toasted by his…

    1 minute
  • Campus & Community

    This month in Harvard History

    Feb. 29, 1672 – President Charles Chauncy dies in office.

    1 minute
  • Campus & Community

    FAS dean to return to faculty

    Jeremy R. Knowles, dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences since 1991, has announced his plans to end his service as dean and to return to the faculty at the end of this academic year.

    8 minutes
  • Science & Tech

    Direct-to-consumer advertising of prescription drugs grows rapidly

    In the first analysis of patterns of direct-to-consumer advertising before and after 1997 guidelines issued by the Food and Drug Administration, researchers at the Harvard School of Public Health, Harvard…

    1 minute
  • Science & Tech

    State of U.S. public health drinking water reliable

    “Over the last century, the U.S. has set the world standard for ensuring a reliable, relatively safe drinking water supply to the general public,” said Ronnie B. Levin, a research…

    1 minute
  • Science & Tech

    Physicians warn of nuclear terrorist threat

    In a new study, Lachlan Forrow, director of ethics support services at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and associate professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School. and his co-authors used…

    1 minute
  • Campus & Community

    Jeremy R. Knowles, Dean at Harvard, to Return to the Faculty

    Jeremy R. Knowles, Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences since 1991, has announced his plans to end his service as Dean and to return to the Faculty at the end of this academic year.

    8 minutes
  • Science & Tech

    Physicians vs. the Internet

    Each day, about 7.5 million people in the United States use the Internet to get health information, while less than 3 million consult their doctors. Of the 110 million Americans…

    1 minute
  • Health

    Hormone leptin tied to fat breakdown in muscle

    Research has shown that leptin is an important hormone with a hand in many metabolic processes. It undoubtedly has widespread effects that may influence diabetes as well as obesity. Recent…

    1 minute
  • Health

    Researchers eye earliest triggers of age-related macular degeneration

    Age-related macular degeneration is the leading cause of blindness for Americans over 60 years of age. It affects more than 14 million people. But how it attacks the macula, the…

    1 minute
  • Science & Tech

    Genetic computation tells man from microbe

    By one estimate (based on bacteria counts in the colon or stool samples), microbes that call our bodies home outnumber human cells 10 to 1. Most of the bacteria, viruses,…

    1 minute
  • Campus & Community

    Dusty trails may reveal new planets

    Great blobs of dust may signal the presence of a planet orbiting Vega, the brightest star in the summer sky.

    5 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    Threshers, goblins, and great whites

    The race was on. With the Harvard Museum of Natural Historys (HMNH) giant Kronosaurus skeleton as a backdrop, three groups of kindergartners and first-graders began assembling their puzzles, slapping pieces onto the blue-gray carpet until they revealed: A shark, a shark, and another shark.

    3 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    Psychoanalysis symposium at Radcliffe

    Race and the aesthetics of aversion, subjectivity and its discontents, and the impact of Sept. 11 on psychoanalysis are among the topics to be discussed at a one-day symposium sponsored by the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study. Why Psychoanalysis? A Symposium on the Value of Psychoanalysis for Contemporary Life will be held on Friday, Feb.…

    2 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    Swift candid, confident in KSG address

    The Sept. 11 tragedies irretrievably changed the nature of public service and made it more important than ever that people take an active interest in their communities and in the public servants that make them work, Massachusetts Gov. Jane Swift told a Kennedy School audience Tuesday (Feb. 5).

    3 minutes