Year: 2003

  • Campus & Community

    The Big Picture:

    Hey mister, are you somebody?

  • Campus & Community

    Swimming lessons:

    Why is the story written in fragments?

  • Campus & Community

    Harvard supports Cambridge learning with $500,000 in grants

    Cambridge Mayor Michael Sullivan joined Harvard President Lawrence H. Summers at Cambridge Rindge and Latin School (CRLS) on Aug. 1 to celebrate Harvards contribution of more than $500,000 to a variety of programs, agencies, and organizations that are helping advance the common goal of learning in Cambridge.

  • Campus & Community

    Police reports

    Following are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department (HUPD) for the weeks beginning July 22 and ending Aug. 16. The official log is located at…

  • Campus & Community

    President Summers to present ‘It’s Movie Time’

    The second annual Its Movie Time at Harvard – a free outdoor film screening presented by President Lawrence H. Summers – will be held Sept. 21 at 6:45 p.m. in Tercentenary Theatre (between Memorial Church and Widener Library). The event, open to the entire University community and their families, will feature complimentary sodas and popcorn.

  • Campus & Community

    This month in Harvard history

    Aug. 18, 1812 – Holworthy Hall is dedicated as “Holworthy College.” Aug. 14, 1945 – In the wake of the dropping of two atomic bombs by the U.S., the Empire…

  • Campus & Community

    It’s not the sun’s or smoke’s fault, it’s the asphalt

    Most people in America are familiar with the words black lung disease, first used in 1942 to describe a painful and often fatal occupational hazard to coal miners who breathe in particulates day after day. Black lung and other perils of coal mining are well known, though the population of miners in the United States…

  • Campus & Community

    Adding years to your life by reducing your risks

    If you eat right, exercise regularly, and do all the other things health columnists advise you to do, how many years could you add to your life? How much is it worth in terms of extra years to quit smoking, cut back on your favorite cocktail, and substitute a small portion of tofu for a…

  • Science & Tech

    Dictionary collects American regional expressions

    Besides shedding light on mind-teasing and sense-pleasing expressions, the Dictionary of Regional English (DARE) is a fun book to browse through – all four volumes. Hundreds of maps show where…

  • Health

    Identifying which tumors will spread

    Researchers at Harvard Medical School have identified a pattern of gene activity that seems to predict whether cancer will return after it is first treated. The ominous pattern shows up…

  • Health

    Adding years to your life

    A research team did the first global study of the potential increase in life expectancy if 20 well-known risk factors could be eliminated or reduced to safer levels. These factors…

  • Campus & Community

    Students fly in NASA’s weightless environment

    Harvard Extension School students Mario Garcia, So-One Hwang, Lily Kang, and Manoj Ramachandran in July 2003 experienced the weightlessness of microgravity through NASA’s Reduced Gravity Student Flight Opportunities Program, which…

  • Health

    Black lung redux

    There are approximately 500,000 asphalt workers in the United States today who have significantly increased risk of lung, stomach, bladder, and nonmelanoma skin cancer – yet little is known about…

  • Science & Tech

    New busing controversy flares up

    James Hammitt, professor at the School of Public Health, and his colleagues have spent the past three years doing risk analyses of buses with conventional diesel engines and emission-controlled diesel…

  • Health

    Study shows U.S. health care paperwork cost $294.3 billion in 1999

    Researchers at Harvard Medical School and the Canadian Institute for Health Information, Canada’s quasi-official health statistics agency, analyzed the administrative costs of health insurers, employers’ health benefit programs, hospitals, nursing…

  • Health

    Anti-inflammatory drugs may reduce Parkinson’s disease risk

    In the first study to investigate the potential benefit in humans of the use of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) in reducing the risk of Parkinson’s disease, Harvard School of Public…

  • Science & Tech

    “Winking star” started winking only recently

    In 2002, astronomers at Wesleyan University announced that they had discovered a “winking” star that undergoes a regular, long-lasting (approximately 20 day) eclipse every 48 days. They theorized that those…

  • Science & Tech

    Asteroid Juno has a bite out of it

    Juno, the third asteroid ever discovered, was first spotted by astronomers early in the 19th century. It orbits the Sun with thousands of other bits of space rock in the…

  • Science & Tech

    A pancake, not a doughnut, shapes distant galactic center

    Astronomer Lincoln Greenhill (Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics) and colleagues have found direct evidence for a “pancake” of gas and dust at the center of Circinus — a thin, warped disk…

  • Campus & Community

    DRCLAS announces visiting scholars and fellows

    Each year, the David Rockefeller Center for Latin American Studies (DRCLAS) selects a number of distinguished scholars and professionals, many from Latin America, to spend a minimum of one semester at Harvard. While in residence, visiting scholars and fellows spend time working on their own research and writing projects, making use of the Universitys extensive…

  • Campus & Community

    Student of early Christianities:

    King, the Winn Professor of Ecclesiastical History in the Divinity School, is the author of a new book, “What Is Gnosticism?” (Harvard University Press, 2003), which offers a provocative look at Christianity during its formative centuries and the heterogeneous array of groups, doctrines, and beliefs that all claimed to be inspired in some way by…

  • Campus & Community

    High cholesterol increases risk of disease

    The incidence of end-stage renal disease (ESRD), or kidney failure, has doubled over the past decade in the United States. Now researchers at Brigham and Womens Hospital (BWH) have published a study that links abnormal cholesterol levels with the development of kidney problems, raising the possibility of preventing the onset of chronic kidney dysfunction by…

  • Campus & Community

    Leroy Anderson Square dedicated:

    You know his music even if you dont know his name – the sprightly Sleighride, inescapable at Christmastime The Syncopated Clock, heard for 25 years as the theme of New Yorks Late Show The Typewriter, featuring a solo instrument more common in the office than the concert hall the million-selling Blue Tango Jazz Pizzicato A…

  • Campus & Community

    Fast work:

    Cambridge Fire Department responds to a fire that ignited on the tarmac in the construction area on Kirkland Street behind the Design Schools Gund Hall. The firefighters managed to extinguish the fire without incident.

  • Campus & Community

    Season in the Sun

    The University and the square have a special feel this time of year. Theres the usual bustle of activity, but its a sultry, slow sort of busyness, slow enough for the student, resident, or tourist to stop and smell the flowers, look at the postcards, or listen to the street musician play Summertime.

  • Campus & Community

    Memorial Minute: Ramzi S. Cotra

    At a meeting of the Faculty of Medicine on May 28, 2003, the following Minute was placed upon the records.

  • Campus & Community

    Bhutanese fellow knows plants:

    When botanist Rebecca Pradhan returns to her native country of Bhutan this month, she will put her Harvard fellowship to good use. Pradhan is committed to preserving one of Earths last remaining sanctuaries with pristine biodiversity – the forests of Bhutan.

  • Campus & Community

    Putting research results on food labels:

    Its not enough for the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to ensure that foods are safe the agency should also require food producers to inform consumers about the health benefits of their products, said FDA Commissioner Mark B. McClellan at a conference titled Changing the American Diet: Imperatives and Opportunities, co-sponsored by the Harvard School…

  • Campus & Community

    Summers goes to summer school

    In 1996, when he was deputy secretary of the treasury, Lawrence H. Summers received a cell phone call from his boss, Robert Rubin.

  • Campus & Community

    Noninvasive uterine fibroids treatment shows promise:

    Researchers at Harvard-affiliated Brigham and Womens Hospital (BWH) have demonstrated that focused ultrasound, a novel, nonsurgical approach to the treatment of uterine fibroids, appears to be safe. The advent of this treatment, which can be performed as a day procedure, presents a dramatic alternative to current invasive methods such as hysterectomy, the most common cure…