Year: 2004

  • Campus & Community

    Police reports

    Following are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department (HUPD) for the week ending April 10. The official log is located at 1033 Massachusetts Ave., sixth floor.

    2 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    Pledge of allegiance

    Flags adorning the parking lot at O¹Donnell Field, where the Crimson baseballers play, ensure that no visitors think theyre in New Haven.

    1 minute
  • Campus & Community

    This month in Harvard history

    April 4, 1907 – Nathan Marsh Pusey, Harvard’s future 24th President, is born in Council Bluffs, Iowa. April 15, 1912 – The luxury liner “Titanic” sinks in the North Atlantic.…

    1 minute
  • Campus & Community

    Faculty Council notice for April 14

    At its 11th meeting of the year (April 14) the Faculty Council discussed with Dean of the College Benedict Gross (mathematics) and Professor Jennifer Leaning (faculty of public health) the implementation of the recommendations made last year by the Committee to Address Sexual Assault at Harvard (the Leaning Committee). Dean Julia Fox (Harvard College) and…

    1 minute
  • Campus & Community

    Kofi Annan to speak at Afternoon Exercises

    Kofi Annan, the secretary-general of the United Nations and 2001 winner of the Nobel Peace Prize, will be Harvards 2004 Commencement speaker at the Afternoon Exercises on June 10.

    5 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    Lessons from cancer research

    Rakesh Jain looks at tumors from an engineers perspective. The view he gets has led to some startling results.

    6 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    Vicki Norberg-Bohm, 48, admired scholar

    Vicki Norberg-Bohm, a pioneer in the study of technology innovation, died March 21 at the age of 48 after a courageous fight with cancer.

    3 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    Lawrence Buell’s ‘Emerson’ wins award

    The Center for Robert Penn Warren Studies at Western Kentucky University (WKU) has named Lawrence Buell, Powell M. Cabot Professor of American Literature, the recipient of the 2003 Robert Penn Warren-Cleanth Brooks Award for Outstanding Literary Criticism. Buell will receive the award for Emerson (2003, Belknap Press), an assessment of Ralph Waldo Emersons works, at…

    2 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    Presidential technology initiative unveiled

    Funds and fellows will be made available to Harvard faculty in an effort to spark wide-ranging implementation of the powerful array of educational technology pioneered at the University in recent years, Harvard President Lawrence H. Summers and Provost Steven E. Hyman announced.

    4 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    ‘Literary luncheons’ inspire Cambridge schoolchildren

    Tuesdays mean a full house in Pat Goffredos second-grade classroom at the Amigos School in Cambridge. I rarely have any absences on Tuesday, says Goffredo. Even if they have dentists appointments, they make it in.

    4 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    ‘Women Healing Women’ gather

    From physicians and therapists to Reiki practitioners and spirit singers, a wide range of religious and medical professionals shared their projects and findings from the 18-month Women Healing Women project at Harvard Divinity School in March. Sponsored by the Religion, Health and Healing Initiative of the Center for the Study of World Religions, Women Healing…

    2 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    Summers, Trichet discuss euro

    Now that the franc, the mark, and the lira have followed the ducat, the doubloon, and the Louis dOr into numismatic superannuation, economists have been watching with great interest to see how well the successor to these national currencies – the euro – has been doing at replacing the monetary systems of a dozen linguistically…

    4 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    The Big Picture

    Whats smaller than a microbrewery but bigger than a cauldron of homebrew stinking up the kitchen?

    2 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    Hope springs

    This sweet row of Dutch spring tulips seems to have sprung spontaneously out of the cold New England stone fronting the Holyoke Center Arcade. (Staff photo Jon Chase/Harvard News Office)

    1 minute
  • Campus & Community

    Fabulous fakes

    Fakes. Phonies. Forgeries. Institutions are careful not to acquire them – as a rule. But this month, as it has done for five years, the Fogg Art Museum makes an exception to show some Fabulous Fakes and Poignant Poetry, the work of art teacher Deb Whitmores fifth-grade students at Captain Samuel Brown School in Peabody.…

    2 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    Architectural giant Le Corbusier honored in show

    Fitting in and looking as if it belonged was never the point. Otherwise, it would have been made of red brick, not slabs of barefaced concrete. It would have shuffled its interior spaces into neat stacks so people would know where they were and where they were going instead of feeling a sense of perpetual…

    5 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    Online system helps youth apply themselves

    Doing things solo was never a problem for Alesia Johnson. After all, the Charlestown High senior from Dorchester held down a part-time job at a local bank, paid her own living expenses, and kept up pretty good grades without parental involvement. But when it came to applying to college, the first-generation college-bound senior was stumped.

    6 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    Mammograms are effective, based on new look at stats

    A recent, highly controversial series of papers published by two researchers at the Nordic Cochrane Centre in Copenhagen, Peter Gotzsche and Ole Olsen, concluded that mammography does not save lives and instead exposes women to unnecessary diagnostic and surgical procedures.

    3 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    Dept. of Biostatistics names Stuart Baker Distinguished Alum

    The Department of Biostatistics at the Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) has named mathematical statistician Stuart Baker of the National Cancer Institute the recipient of the 2004 Distinguished Alum Award. As the winner, Baker will deliver a lecture at the School this June about his career and life.

    1 minute
  • Campus & Community

    Eye on China

    You go to China, its dazzling, says Erik Eckholm, one of three contributors to an exhibit of photographs called The Reporters Eye: Images from Chinas Socioeconomic Frontiers. Tall buildings. Cars. Growing fast. But there are also all these casualties and cast-offs. I think its important not to forget them.

    6 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    Ackerman funds program for culture, medicine

    A. Bernard Ackerman, a physician and professor who has devoted his career to finding inventive and engaging ways of teaching, is creating a new endowment at Harvard for the study of culture and medicine. The A. Bernard Ackerman Endowment for the Culture of Medicine will establish a professorship and support a wide range of activities…

    5 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    KSG works to improve leadership

    A Kennedy School expert on democracy and leadership in the developing world is assisting a new African effort to improve leadership on the continent by training young leaders and drawing inspiration from current and former best practices and success stories.

    4 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    Clowes Award honors Alt’s three decades of genetic cancer research

    Harvard Medical School Professor of Genetics Frederick W. Alt, a Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator at Childrens Hospital Boston (Department of Molecular Medicine), has received the Clowes Memorial Award from the American Association for Cancer Research (AACR), acknowledging his three decades of seminal discoveries in genomic instability and cancer. The Clowes is the oldest award…

    3 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    Morimoto, 86, adviser, friend to generations of students

    Kiyo Morimoto, who helped tens of thousands of students adjust to college life in his 27 years at Harvards Bureau of Study Counsel, and who served for six years as the bureaus director, died Feb. 22 at the age of 86.

    4 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    When the rubber hits the road

    Kennedy School of Government (KSG) student Kate Kohler is so youthful and bubbly, its hard to imagine her as a veteran of the U.S. Army or a dedicated marathon runner.

    5 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    Teens more likely to use guns to threaten than defend

    California adolescents are much more likely to be threatened with a gun than to use a gun in self-defense, according to an article in the April issue of The Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, one of the JAMA/Archives journals.

    2 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    Political scientist Maass dies at 86

    Arthur Maass, a political scientist whose study of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers management of water resources earned him the respect of the agency he criticized, died on March 26 in his home in Boston. He was 86.

    3 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    Divinity School announces Laura Wood as head librarian

    The search for a new Harvard Divinity School Librarian has ended with the appointment of Laura C. Wood, who will assume leadership of Andover-Harvard Theological Library on June 15.

    2 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    HDS names associate dean for development

    Harvard Divinity School (HDS) Dean William A. Graham has announced the appointment of Elizabeth (Betsy) Sloane as the new associate dean for development and alumni/ae relations at HDS, to start this month.

    2 minutes
  • Campus & Community

    Hyman to deliver HAF lecture

    Harvards administrative and professional staff are invited to attend a lecture presented by Provost Steven E. Hyman as part of the Harvard Administrators Forum (HAF) 2004 lecture series – Managing Change and Seizing Opportunities. At the April 13 lecture, to be held in Emerson Hall, room 105, Hyman will share his perspectives on global changes…

    1 minute