Year: 2004

  • Campus & Community

    Rowland Institute announces new junior fellows

    The Rowland Institute for Science, an interdisciplinary research institute in Cambridge that merged with Harvard in 2002,

  • Campus & Community

    Seasoned Summers offers advice to new college presidents

    Seasoned Summers offers advice to new college presidents

  • Campus & Community

    Harvard sprinter is Athens bound

    Harvard graduate Chris Lambert 03 captured the U.K. Olympic Trials 200-meter dash in 20.94 seconds earlier this month in Manchester, England, to qualify for the big show in Athens. Lambert is one of six Ivy League athletes to advance to the Olympic games in track and field, including Harvard hurdler Brenda Taylor 01. At least…

  • Campus & Community

    Newsmakers

    Cross honored for achievement in Jewish Studies In June, the National Foundation for Jewish Culture presented the 11th Annual Jewish Cultural Achievement Award in Scholarship to Frank Moore Cross, the…

  • Campus & Community

    Study finds ‘ratings creep’

    Violence, sex, and profanity increased significantly in movies between 1992 and 2003, according to a study by researchers from the Kids Risk Project at the Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH). Kimberly Thompson, associate professor in the Department of Health Policy and Management at HSPH and director of the Kids Risk Project, said, The findings…

  • Campus & Community

    At HMS, Hopi and Hawaiian students teach powerful lessons on addiction

    For three weeks, the 20 high school students from Hawaii and Hopi nations had studied the physiological and psychological effects of drug and alcohol addiction with some of the foremost researchers at Harvard Medical School (HMS).

  • Campus & Community

    Unsung no more

    In the world of academia, the spotlight shines brightly on the esteemed faculty who advance knowledge and research, on the promising students and their achievements or misbehavior, on the presidential initiatives that chart the course for the universitys proud future.

  • Campus & Community

    HBS Press, The Commercial Press form Chinese publishing partnership

    Harvard Business School (HBS) Press and The Commercial Press, the oldest publishing house in China, recently announced the formation of an exclusive partnership to publish HBS Press books in the Chinese language.

  • Campus & Community

    Late bloomer

    As the author of several highly respected works of architectural history, William J.R. Curtis receives many new volumes for review, a good portion of them large-format books filled with photographs and reproductions. While he is not always impressed with these tomes as works of scholarship, he does appreciate the packaging they come in, the corrugated…

  • Campus & Community

    Dutch crew tops Harvard, seven set for Athens

    Patriotic pride wasnt enough to lift the Harvard mens crew to victory this July 4 holiday, as the NCAA champion Crimson was forced to settle for second place in international competition at the Henley Royal Regatta on the Thames River. Coming off its second perfect collegiate season, Harvards varsity couldnt overcome a sluggish start in…

  • Campus & Community

    Donato named coach of men’s hockey

    Former Harvard hockey captain, Olympian, and NHL player Ted Donato was named head coach of the Harvard mens ice hockey team on July 2. A 1991 graduate of Harvard who captured an NCAA championship as a sophomore, Donato becomes just the sixth person to serve as Harvards head coach since 1950. The appointment is Donatos…

  • Campus & Community

    Police reports

    Following are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department (HUPD) for the weeks beginning June 13 and ending July 17. The official log is located at 1033 Massachusetts Ave., sixth floor.

  • Campus & Community

    A giant step toward miniaturization

    Incredibly tiny integrated circuits could have applications well beyond faster, smaller computers and cell phones with features only fantasized about today. For example, nanocircuits might make possible sensors that can…

  • Health

    Which comes first, language or thought?

    “Infants are born with a language-independent system for thinking about objects,” says Elizabeth Spelke, a professor of psychology at Harvard. “These concepts give meaning to the words they learn later.”…

  • Health

    Study yields insights into precancerous condition

    Caused by a mutation that inactivates the tumor suppressor gene LKB1, PJS causes gastrointestinal polyps that have a 30 to 50 percent chance of becoming cancerous, says senior author Lewis…

  • Health

    Stem cell science

    “Stem-cell transplants are already performed every day in Harvard-affiliated hospitals — and around the world,” says Harvard Stem Cell Initiative codirector David Scadden, professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School…

  • Campus & Community

    Howard Frank, surgeon and inventor, dies

    Howard A. Frank, co-developer of the heart pacemaker and clinical professor of surgery emeritus at Harvard Medical School, died from complications of a stroke at his Brookline, Mass., home on June 27. He was 89.

  • Campus & Community

    Fruit helps prevent blindness

    Harvard researchers have shown that an apple a day isnt quite enough to keep the eye doctor away – at least for the most common type of blindness that afflicts the elderly.

  • Campus & Community

    Alums get on the cutting edge of science

    It was a science picnic for alums. A 50th reunion symposium on June 9 featured five of the best minds on the Harvard faculty, if not in the world.

  • Campus & Community

    Interns focus on the public interest

    Public Interest Careers at Harvard promotes and supports College undergraduates whose career goals are focused on the public interest.

  • Campus & Community

    Shrinking the opportunity gap

    Harvard is committing financial and scholarly resources to widening access to high-quality education, President Lawrence H. Summers said at the Annual Meeting of the Harvard Alumni Association (HAA) during the Afternoon Exercises of Commencement.

  • Campus & Community

    Graduate life science study to be unified

    Harvards disparate graduate programs in the life sciences will be unified under a single programmatic umbrella beginning in July in a reorganization that aims to increase coordination between the individual courses of study and allow greater student mobility and programmatic versatility.

  • Campus & Community

    Tilghman ‘dismayed’ by Atwood’s latest

    Shirley Tilghmans keynote address at the Radcliffe Day celebration on Friday (June 11), brought up some interesting issues regarding the role of science in society, the importance of scientific literacy, and the obstacles facing women scientists. But it would have made an even more interesting debate.

  • Campus & Community

    Recommendations from Student Mental Health Task Force

    The Student Mental Health Task Force, convened in December 2003 by Provost Steven E. Hyman and Dean of Harvard College Benedict Gross, released its final report today (June 17) urging a broad range of recommendations aimed at improving mental health education, resources, and services across the University.

  • Campus & Community

    Leadership Institute in third year

    New York State Sen. Thomas K. Duanes three weeks at Harvard in February were among the richest he can remember.

  • Campus & Community

    Seven to receive first Smith Awards

    The first Herchel Smith Harvard Undergraduate Research Fellowships have been granted to seven Harvard College students who will use the awards to support scientific research conducted around the world this summer.

  • Campus & Community

    New tech fellows to enhance pedagogy

    The first group of Presidential Instructional Technology Fellows got their marching orders this week during training designed to prepare them for a summers work of creating new online course content aimed at enhancing the Faculty of Arts and Sciences (FAS) educational experience.

  • Campus & Community

    Newsmakers

    Faculty to receive HMS-HDS mentoring awards Seven faculty members of Harvard Medical School (HMS) will receive Excellence in Mentoring Awards, co-sponsored by HMS and the School of Dental Medicine (HDS),…

  • Campus & Community

    Ancient Chinese technical tango

    Distinctive spiral grooves carved on ornamental jade rings used in Chinese burial rites some 2,500 years ago appear to have been created with a highly precise machine, a Harvard University graduate student reports in the June 11 issue of the journal Science.