Year: 2004
-
Campus & Community
Teacher, researcher, advocate – a whole life
Esteemed Kennedy School faculty member Susan C. Eaton died Dec. 30 of complications from leukemia. She was 46.
-
Campus & Community
Huskies outman Crimson
It was more for lack of hustlers than hustle that the Harvard mens track and field team fell to cross-town rival Northeastern this past Saturday (Jan. 10) at Gordon Track. Short-manned due to injuries, the mens team failed to enter a single sprinter in any race under 500 meters, eventually falling, 82-62, in their first…
-
Campus & Community
Sports briefs
Rugby club seeks grad student-players The Harvard Business School (HBS) Rugby Football Club seeks players from across Harvard’s graduate schools for training, matches, tours, tournaments, and social events. Rugby players…
-
Campus & Community
High intake of vitamin D is linked to reduced risk of MS
In the first prospective study to assess the relationship between vitamin D intake in women and the risk of developing multiple sclerosis (MS), researchers from the Harvard School of Public Health found that women with the highest intake of vitamin D through supplement use had a 40 percent lower risk of developing MS as compared…
-
Campus & Community
The Big Picture
Carolyn MacLeod might be the least likely person to head a championship curling team.
-
Campus & Community
In brief
Vacation program seeks experienced teachers The Harvard School Vacation Program is looking for experienced teachers or teacher assistants. The program, which enrolls 25 children of Harvard faculty and staff in…
-
Campus & Community
Celebration of King’s life set for Memorial Church
A celebration of the life and mission of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. will be held Monday (Jan. 19) at 5 p.m. in the Memorial Church. Gary Orfield, professor of education and social policy at the Graduate School of Education, will deliver the keynote address: Dont Just Activate – Celebrate!
-
Campus & Community
I’ll buy that!
Just in time for New Years resolutions, a new book, Free Expression, details more than 100 possibilities for writers seeking contests, competitions, and other opportunities. And unlike programs that charge reading fees or processing fees, this books listings are fee-free, according to author Erika Dreifus, who currently teaches in the Harvard Extension School Writing Program.
-
Campus & Community
Jackie O’Neill named University marshal
President Lawrence H. Summers announced yesterday (Jan. 14) that longtime veteran of the Harvard administration Jackie ONeill has agreed to be the next University marshal.
-
Campus & Community
New journal examines ‘Age Explosion’
The Harvard Institute for Learning in Retirement and the social advocacy nonprofit Generations Policy Initiative have launched a new journal that aims to highlight problems related to the aging of Americas baby boom population.
-
Campus & Community
HUPD, Safety Committee offer tips for students, staff
HUPD would like to remind students, faculty, and staff of the University to be aware of your surroundings, particularly when walking alone after dark. The College Safety Committee encourages members of the University community to walk in groups along designated, well-lit pathways. A map of designated safety pathways is located in the Student Telephone Directory.
-
Campus & Community
President Summers holds student office hours on Feb. 10
President Lawrence H. Summers will hold office hours for students in his Massachusetts Hall office on the following dates:
-
Campus & Community
Police reports
Following are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department for the week ending Jan. 10. The official log is located at 1033 Massachusetts Ave., sixth floor.
-
Campus & Community
This month in Harvard history
January 1767 – In a major curriculum reform, the College abolishes the ancient one-tutor-for-all-subjects system and introduces instructional specialization. A different tutor now teaches in each of the following four…
-
Campus & Community
Police advisory
On Jan. 13 at approximately 5:40 p.m., a female undergraduate student was walking on Mt. Auburn Street in the area of Claverly Hall when a male approached her in the opposite direction and groped her. The suspect continued walking on Mt. Auburn Street. Officers from both the Harvard University Police Department (HUPD) and the Cambridge…
-
Campus & Community
Monsters, tooth fairies, God, and germs!
Young children receive an enormous volume of information – from the identity of their biological parents to names for animals to facts about the world around them – by testimony: Someone tells them that the family pooch is called a dog and that Mom and Dad are, indeed, Mom and Dad.
-
Science & Tech
Monsters, tooth fairies and germs!
Harvard Graduate School of Education Professor Paul Harris argues that children as young as preschool age can discern whether or not they’re hearing the truth, even in a domain for…
-
Health
Monkeys unable to master grammar crucial to human language
Grammar is essentially a system of rules for taking a finite set of discrete elements and combining them into a limitless range of novel expressions. For humans, grammar cobbles together…
-
Campus & Community
Scientists pursue happiness
“When we try to predict what will make us happy we’re often wrong,” says Daniel Gilbert, a professor of psychology at Harvard University. “Researchers all over the world find the…
-
Health
Study suggests more cancer patients receiving aggressive care at end of life
Researchers reviewed the records of 28,777 Medicare-eligible patients aged 65 and older who died within one year of being diagnosed with lung, breast, colorectal, and other gastrointestinal tumors between 1993…
-
Health
Idea inspires new screening test for anti-cancer agents
In a study published in the December 2003 issue of Cell, investigators from Dana-Farber Cancer Institute demonstrated that a new technique has helped them to identify a class of existing…
-
Health
High intake of vitamin D linked to reduced risk of multiple sclerosis
More than 185,000 women from the Brigham and Women’s-based Nurses’ Health Study and Nurses’ Health Study II, who were free of multiple sclerosis (MS), were selected for a research study.…
-
Campus & Community
Joe Lieberman connects at ‘Hardball’
Describing Saddam Hussein as a ticking time bomb who had destabilized the Middle East and represented a serious threat to the United States, Connecticut Sen. Joseph Lieberman reiterated his support for the U.S. invasion of Iraq at a Dec. 15 live broadcast of MSNBCs Hardball from the John F. Kennedy Jr. Forum.
-
Campus & Community
Guiding the light fantastic on silica wire ‘rails’
Marrying fiber optics with nanotechnology, scientists at Harvard University have created silica wires that are far narrower than the wavelength of light yet can still guide a light beam with great precision. The wires, about a thousandth the width of a human hair, function with minimal signal loss even when their walls accommodate well under…
-
Campus & Community
Feeling a little blue
It’s not every Harvard class that opens with a standing ovation. But then, most Harvard classes aren’t launched with the introduction, “The king of the blues, B.B. King!”
-
Campus & Community
Abram Bergson
At a meeting of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences on November 18, 2003, the following Minute was placed upon the records.
-
Campus & Community
Crimson turns blue
Its not every Harvard class that opens with a standing ovation.
-
Campus & Community
Standing Committees – 2003-2004
Upon the recommendation of the Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, the President approved and announced the following Standing Committees at the F.A.S. Faculty Meeting of October 21, 2003. Standing Committees of the Faculty are constituted to perform a continuing function. Each committee has been established by a vote of the Faculty, and…
-
Campus & Community
‘Trays’ in Gund Hall serve up design delights
Abby Feldman has a Laurel and Hardy screen saver with photos that change every five seconds or so. There are the boys in Sons of the Desert. There they are in Another Fine Mess, Way Out West, Babes in Toyland.
-
Campus & Community
New sculptures, new landscape
Sun Gate, a bronze sculpture weighing half a ton, arrived one day in the back of a pickup truck driven by artist Murray Dewart 70. Dewart and his assistant, aided by a group of undergraduates, rolled the piece down the ramp and into place at the exact center of McKinlock Courtyard at Leverett House, where…