Year: 2003

  • Campus & Community

    Savitz Prize awarded for best paper

    The Kennedy Schools Environment and Natural Resources Faculty Group (ENRFG) has announced that this years Savitz Prize, given to the best paper written by masters students in the area of environmental and resource policy, has been conferred upon Adriana Hochberg and Catherine Rauschuber, master of public policy (M.P.P.) students. Their winning paper examines the use…

  • Campus & Community

    Police reports

    Following are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department for the week ending June 7. The official log is located at 1033 Massachusetts Ave., sixth floor.

  • Campus & Community

    Newsmakers

    Sailing captures coed championship A day after retaining its team race national championship, Harvard sailing captured the Coed Dinghy North American Championship this past Tuesday (June 10) at Bayview Yacht…

  • Campus & Community

    Memorial service set for Lee

    A memorial service for Tony Lee, associate director of financial services, will be held June 27 at Sanders Theatre, 45 Quincy St., from 1 to 4 p.m. Memorial donations may be made to the Lowe Center for Thoracic Oncology, c/o Michael Rabin, M.D., D1234, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, 44 Binney St., Boston, MA 02115. Lee was…

  • Campus & Community

    This month in Harvard history

    June 19, 1858 – At the Boston City Regatta, crimson finds its first use as a Harvard color when members of a Harvard boat club seek to distinguish themselves among…

  • Campus & Community

    Diabetic kidney disease is reversible:

    Kidney disease, thought to be unstoppable in many people with type 1 diabetes, has been reversed with the help of nature, early detection, and tight blood sugar control.

  • Health

    Pregnant women carrying boys eat more than those carrying girls

    Researchers looked at the diets of 244 pregnant American women via a food frequency questionnaire during the second trimester. They found that women expecting a boy had an eight percent…

  • Campus & Community

    Dueling biochemist taking fight to malaria:

    Harvard senior Amy Bei became interested in tropical diseases in the summer after high school, when she worked at a lab in San Francisco, near her home in Santa Rosa, Calif.

  • Campus & Community

    Seniors, Summers get together:

    Harvard President Lawrence H. Summers urged the rushed, overscheduled Class of 2003 to know their priorities, to know that time is precious, and to keep the daily rush of temporarily urgent tasks from crowding out whats truly and enduringly important in life.

  • Campus & Community

    ROTC members commissioned:

    At the ROTC Commissioning Ceremony held Wednesday (June 4) in Tercentenary Theatre, nine Harvard seniors took the oath of office administered by Roger C. Taylor 53, retired Navy officer, currently a writer on nautical subjects.

  • Campus & Community

    CES announces student grants and fellowships for 2003-04:

    The Minda de Gunzburg Center for European Studies (CES) has announced its student grants and fellowships for the 2003-04 academic year. The center will support the research projects of 36 undergraduate and graduate students with awards that total more than $350,000.

  • Campus & Community

    Humanities Center names two fellows

    The Humanities Center at Harvard has named teaching fellows Marianne Hopman and Keja Valens recipients of its 2003-04 interdisciplinary dissertation completion fellowships. Hopman (Department of Classics) received the fellowship for The Figure of Scylla in Greek Culture, while Valens (Department of Comparative Literature) was recognized for Between Women: Figurations of Desire in Caribbean Literatures.

  • Campus & Community

    Newsmakers

    A.R.T. one of Time’s top five Time magazine has recently named the American Repertory Theatre (A.R.T.) as one of the five best regional theaters in the country. For its focus…

  • Campus & Community

    Tony Lee dies at 60:

    Tony Lee, 60, of Brookline, died May 20, at Brigham and Women’s Hospital after a short illness.

  • Campus & Community

    Davis Center names 2003-04 award winners:

    The Davis Center for Russian Studies has announced the recipients of its fellowships, prizes, dissertation completion grants, and research travel grants for 2003-04.

  • Campus & Community

    Crews cruise to national titles:

    The Radcliffe heavyweight crew captured the NCAA championship this past Sunday (June 1) on Eagle Creek Reservoir in Indianapolis. The Black and White clinched the NCAA team title – the teams second since 1972 – by winning the varsity race with a time of 6:26.98, besting Michigan (6:28.58), Stanford (6:29.54), Washington (6:30.07), Virginia (6:31.49), and…

  • Campus & Community

    Extension School announces 2003 prizes:

    This year, the Extension Schools Commencement Speaker award will go to Stephen Silver, A.L.M. 03, concentrator in religion. The title of his talk will be Thomas Wolfe Was Right … Half-Right.

  • Campus & Community

    Deans unite!:

    Inside University Hall recently, five former deans of Harvard College gathered with the present dean and the soon-to-become dean for an informal portrait. In the back (standing left to right) are former Dean John Fox, Dick Gross (presently dean of undergraduate education), and present Dean of Harvard College Harry R. Lewis. Seated left to right…

  • Campus & Community

    Fighting diabetes in Costa Rica:

    When Sara Goldhaber met Jeremy Fiebert during their first year at Harvard, they had no idea that, eight years later, they would be trying to get rural people in Costa Rica to exercise more and eat less sausage and cake.

  • Campus & Community

    Heading north to heal:

    Two Harvard School of Public Health (SPH) students have heeded the call to combat tropical diseases – by heading to the Arctic.

  • Campus & Community

    Greenport Mayor Kapell learns on the job:

    David Kapell may be a long way from home, but he still runs the place.

  • Campus & Community

    Grand jeté:

    Driving along Interstate 80, pulling a rented trailer containing all his worldly possessions, Christopher Alloways-Ramsey had no way of knowing that his life was suddenly about to change.

  • Campus & Community

    For journalist Jayne Iafrate, graduation is big news:

    In his novel Moby Dick, Herman Melville wrote about mans encounter with the destructive forces of nature.

  • Campus & Community

    At 83, he finishes his Harvard degree:

    On his first day at Harvard, John Rigby 03 thought the place was a mess. The Yard was littered with branches, twigs, trash, and whole oak trees torn from the ground. Of course, there was a good reason for the carnage: Boston was just beginning to peek out from hiding after the great hurricane of…

  • Campus & Community

    Seeing beyond the bars to the ‘child of God’:

    Janel Reppert Rice makes sure to warn volunteers for the Prison Education Project of Harvard University that prison is not a consumer-friendly place.

  • Campus & Community

    Finding her voice at Harvard:

    Johanna Paretzky 03 came to Harvard a jock. Her high school days and summer vacations had been filled with soccer, basketball, and karate, and she considered competing at Harvard.

  • Campus & Community

    Hat trick:

    For someone who likes to get things done, often in overtime, senior hockey standout Jennifer Botterill places a surprising amount of stock in the power of persuasion. Yet the explosive Canadian forward – part owner of four Beanpot titles (two of which she won in OT), one national championship (also won in OT), and two…

  • Campus & Community

    From cow-dung hut to Harvard:

    When Joseph Lemasolai Lekuton receives the M.Ed. degree today from Harvards Graduate School of Education (GSE), hell be one of the few graduates whose parents are not proud.

  • Campus & Community

    Sachin Shivaram welcomes the burden of privilege at Harvard:

    In his sophomore year, Sachin Shivaram 03 spotted a course at the Kennedy School of Government that sounded tailor-made to his interests: Race, Class, and Poverty in Urban America, taught by sociologist William Julius Wilson.

  • Campus & Community

    ‘If she can make it there . . .’:

    Next fall, while many of her fellow graduates are sending their resumes around to Fortune 500 companies or getting ready to pursue graduate or professional degrees, Shelby Braxton-Brooks 03 will be taking a route that is a little less well-worn and, in some peoples estimation, a lot riskier.