Year: 2005

  • Campus & Community

    Soldiers Field

    …in our youth our hearts were touched with fire. It was given to us to learn at the outset that life is a profound and passionate thing….

  • Campus & Community

    In brief

    PBHA and Class of ’55 fete 100 years of service More than 100 members from the Class of 1955 kicked off their 50th reunion at a June 5 dinner reception…

  • Campus & Community

    Harvard Business School dean to step down, move on

    Harvard Business School Dean Kim B. Clark announced Monday (June 6) that he will step down on July 31, in order to accept the role of president of Brigham Young University, Idaho, shortly thereafter. Clark was named dean of Harvard Business School (HBS) in 1995 he is the eighth dean in the Schools 97-year history.

  • Campus & Community

    Harvard awards 8 honorary degrees

    Mary Ellen Avery Doctor of Science Mary Ellen Avery, recipient of an honorary doctor of science degree, received the National Medal of Science in 1991 for her discovery of the…

  • Campus & Community

    Police reports

    Following are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department for the week ending June 6. The official log is located at 1033 Massachusetts Ave., sixth floor, and is available online at http://www.hupd.harvard.edu/.

  • Campus & Community

    A year of action, achievement, discovery

    So much happens at Harvard University during the year, its quite a task to winnow all thats worth noting into a two-page summary.

  • Campus & Community

    Extension School students and faculty are honored with prizes for outstanding work

    This year, the Harvard University Extension Schools Commencement Speaker Award will go to Monica Antoinette Brooker A.L.B., cum laude. Brooker will speak on the topic Commencement as Perfection this afternoon (June 9).

  • Campus & Community

    354th Commencement: Harvard confers 6,580 degrees and 224 certificates

    Today the University awarded a total of 6,580 degrees and 224 certificates. A breakdown of the degrees by schools and programs follows. Harvard College granted a total of 1,590 degrees.

  • Campus & Community

    Two win Fisher Prize in GIS User’s Group

    The committee of the Howard T. Fisher Prize in Geographical Information Science (GIS) at Harvard has announced the recipients of the award for the 2004-05 academic year.

  • Campus & Community

    Davis Center names 2005-06 award winners

    Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies has announced the recipients of its 2005-06 fellowships, prizes, research travel grants, and internships. A total of eight postdoctoral and senior fellowships have…

  • Campus & Community

    Area educators receive Conant Fellowships

    The Harvard Graduate School of Education (HGSE) recently presented five outstanding educators in the Boston and Cambridge public school systems with James Bryant Conant Fellowships. The awards, which were given…

  • Campus & Community

    African Studies awards summer research grants

    The Harvard Committee on African Studies has awarded 11 research grants for undergraduate and graduate students to travel to sub-Saharan Africa during the summer of 2005.

  • Campus & Community

    Navigating the swells and dips of HBS

    Nathaniel Fogg, graduating from Harvard Business School this year, is something not often found on an Ivy League campus in this age of an all-voluntary military: a veteran of the United States Navy.

  • Campus & Community

    A doctor goes home

    The Afghan province of Badakhshan has the highest maternal death rate ever recorded, with 6,500 women dying in childbirth out of every 100,000 births.

  • Campus & Community

    Warrior for the poor

    In the Indian state of Orissa, Dharitri Patnaik has loomed large, fighting for the rights of poor women and children.

  • Campus & Community

    Not just numb3rs

    Mathematicians have a reputation for being a bit detached from the concerns of ordinary mortals. Living in a realm of abstract ideas, of seductive puzzles and tantalizing conundrums, they tend to regard the ordinary physical world as so much clutter, annoyances to be perfunctorily dealt with before returning to their equations and proofs.

  • Campus & Community

    Treating the soul

    Since 1994, Tucker McCravy has made Sri Lanka his second home, first as a Peace Corps volunteer and then as the catalyst for several educational ventures there. So when areas of the nation were devastated by the December tsunami, McCravy knew just what children in refugee camps needed.

  • Campus & Community

    Virtually fiction

    Few things please fiction writers more than having readers tell them that the fictional worlds theyve created possess the ring of truth.

  • Campus & Community

    Harvard, anyone?

    For Erika de Lone, todays graduation was a long time coming. So long, in fact, that classmates with whom she began her Harvard journey are going to be back on campus – for their 10th reunion.

  • Campus & Community

    Probing the role of gene reshuffling

    While still a graduate student, Wendy Winckler took part in a major discovery about the nature of the human genome. She worked in the laboratory of David Altshuler, an associate professor of genetics at the Medical School, on recombination, the process by which a father and mothers DNA gets reshuffled to create new variations of…

  • Campus & Community

    Playmaker

    Harvard quarterback Ryan Fitzpatrick 05 takes on the game of life much the same way he approaches football: with a quick wit, keen instincts, and a talent for adapting to his surroundings. Beginning with his days as an Arizona All-Star with Highland High School in the Phoenix suburb of Gilbert, to his four seasons of…

  • Campus & Community

    Protein trafficker

    A search for balance in his life has led Ashutosh Jadhav from a house with a leaky roof in rural India toward Ph.D. and M.D. degrees from Harvard.

  • Campus & Community

    Taking control

    Brandon Terry 05 never wanted to come to Harvard. Ivy League schools were for students who are wealthy and white. Terry is neither.

  • Campus & Community

    The bells are ringing

    A joyous peal of bells will ring throughout Cambridge today (June 9). In celebration of the city of Cambridge and of the countrys oldest university – and of our earlier history when bells of varying tones summoned us from sleep to prayer, work, or study – this ancient yet new sound will fill Harvard Square…

  • Campus & Community

    HAA announces annual Aloian Scholars

    Joshua Reyes 05 of Leverett House and Navin Kumar 06 of Kirkland House have been named this years David Aloian Memorial Scholars. The two will be honored at the Harvard Alumni Associations (HAA) fall dinner in October.

  • Campus & Community

    Russert urges graduates to lead, help others

    Saying that each generation has a chance to be the greatest generation, NBC News Washington bureau chief and Meet the Press moderator Tim Russert urged members of Harvards Class of 2005 Wednesday (June 8) to seize their opportunity to make the world a better place.

  • Campus & Community

    Graduating into service

    Seven Harvard College seniors began their service to the nation yesterday (June 8) at the Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC) commissioning ceremony in Tercentenary Theatre. Smaller but no less traditional than todays Commencement Exercises, the commissioning ceremony featured remarks by President Lawrence H. Summers and reflections from Harvard alumni on their lives as scholars and…

  • Campus & Community

    Former CIA director calls for Iraq withdrawal

    Former CIA Director John M. Deutch, institute professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), said that the United States is not making progress toward key objectives in Iraq and called for American troops to pull out as soon as possible during a speech Tuesday (June 7) at Harvards Sanders Theatre.

  • Campus & Community

    Freshmen together

    In his Baccalaureate address, Lawrence H. Summers spoke to the graduating seniors less as Harvards president and more as an honorary member of the Class of 2005, which, in a manner of speaking, he is.