Year: 2005

  • Campus & Community

    At the corner of ‘Sesame Street and Appian Way, HGSE, Sesame Workshop announce collaboration

    Grover, the furry blue monster of Sesame Street fame, held a press conference at the Harvard Graduate School of Education (HGSE) Tuesday (Feb. 8) to announce the Harvard School of Grover, a new school of all the major majors, including not only law, medicine, and business but also hotel and restaurant management and air conditioning…

  • Campus & Community

    Simulations show growth of black holes

    Using a new computer model of galaxy formation, researchers have shown that growing black holes release a blast of energy that fundamentally regulates galaxy evolution and black hole growth itself. The model explains for the first time observed phenomena, and promises to deliver deeper insights into our understanding of galaxy formation and the role of…

  • Campus & Community

    Ambassador hails Indian-U.S. partnership

    Indias ambassador to the United States hailed a growing partnership between the two nations Tuesday (Feb. 8), saying the diversity of their populations and strength of their democracies align the two countries interests.

  • Campus & Community

    Newsom defends gay marriage at forum

    San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom, who excited the ire of many with his decision to marry gay couples contrary to state law, told an audience at the Kennedy School Forum Tuesday night (Feb. 8) that he remains committed to marriage equality.

  • Campus & Community

    Libraries seek digitization proposals

    The Executive Committee for Harvards Library Digital Initiative (LDI) has scheduled two University-wide calls for grant proposals for digitization projects in direct support of teaching and research through the LDI Internal Challenge Grant Program.

  • Campus & Community

    Joint Center seeks emerging leaders

    Harvards Joint Center for Housing Studies and the Neighborhood Reinvestment Corp. are offering a competitive summer fellowship opportunity for forward-thinking Harvard students in law, business, planning, and public administration/policy. Blending academics and field experience, the 2005 Emerging Leaders in Community and Economic Development Fellowship program is open to University students in the fields of study…

  • Campus & Community

    Maybury-Lewis named director of DRCLAS

    Biorn Maybury-Lewis made his first trip to Latin America when he was only an infant. Brazilian Air Force pilots left him and his anthropologist parents in the middle of the central highlands of Brazils vast interior, quickly taking off in their small aircraft before the local Brazilian indigenous people – the Shavante – showed up.…

  • Campus & Community

    HRES proposes 2005-06 rents for Affiliated Housing

    Proposed 2005-2006 rents for new affiliated residents who sign leases as of July 1, 2005:

  • Campus & Community

    Sports in brief

    Women pucksters burn Huskies, 9-1, in Beanpot semis The No. 5 Harvard women’s hockey team avenged their male counterparts’ recent OT loss against Northeastern with a 9-1 blowout of the…

  • Campus & Community

    Doubled over

    For the Harvard University men’s hockey team, this past Monday’s (Feb. 7) 81-minute-double-overtime-marathon-on-ice against Northeastern ended awfully abruptly. With the game tied at 1, just minutes into the second extra-frame,…

  • Campus & Community

    In brief

    IOP funding for thesis research The Institute of Politics (IOP) is offering awards to Harvard undergraduates for summer research and fieldwork relating directly to a senior thesis or a comparable…

  • Campus & Community

    Newsmakers

    Stavins appointed chair of new EOEA advisory board Albert Pratt Professor of Business and Government Robert Stavins has been appointed chair of the newly created scientific advisory board at the…

  • Campus & Community

    When is a philosopher not a philosopher?

    It’s the first descriptive word on David Rodowick’s Harvard Web page, coming immediately after his name and before “Professor of Visual and Environmental Studies.”

  • Campus & Community

    Pigeon’s-eye view

    Pigeon netting in the windows of the Memorial Hall tower casts a filmy grid over the Science Center and environs.

  • Campus & Community

    President holds office hours for students

    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 (HUPD) for the week ending Feb. 7. The official log is located at 1033 Massachusetts Ave., sixth floor.

  • Campus & Community

    This month in Harvard history

    February 1943 – With an eye toward the postwar world, the Business School launches a research project on the role of local radio advertising in the marketing of peacetime products…

  • Campus & Community

    Hasty Woman and Man of the Year event schedule

    Feb. 10 – Woman of the Year Please note: The parade has been cancelled due to inclement weather. See http://www.hastypudding.org/new/ for details. 3:30 p.m. – Roast and presentation of Pudding…

  • Campus & Community

    Faculty Council meeting on Feb. 9

    At its seventh meeting of the year (Feb. 9) the Faculty Council discussed with Dean Benedict Gross (Harvard College and mathematics) a proposed requirement that all spring term evaluations for the Committee on Undergraduate Educations Course Evaluation Guide be submitted online. David Heitmeyer, manager of Web and Applications Development, and David Sobel, senior manager of…

  • Campus & Community

    Harvard community donates $553,132

    The Harvard University community has donated $553,132 to 26 nonprofit organizations supporting relief efforts related to the Dec. 26 tsunami in South Asia. Through a program established by Harvard President Lawrence H. Summers last month, the University matched up to $100 of donations from 3,359 faculty, staff and students. Individual contributions totaled $307,255 the University…

  • Campus & Community

    Task forces on women established

    Recent public discussion about women and science has brought renewed attention to long-standing issues concerning the representation of women in the faculty ranks at Harvard and in other top research universities. In response, Harvard President Lawrence H. Summers has announced the establishment of two University-wide task forces to develop concrete proposals to reduce barriers to…

  • Campus & Community

    Ernst Mayr, giant among evolutionary biologists, dies at 100

    Ernst Mayr, the Harvard University evolutionary biologist who has been called the Darwin of the 20th century, died on Feb. 3 at a retirement community in Bedford, Mass. A member of the Harvard faculty for more than half a century, he was 100.

  • Campus & Community

    A bit of Baker Street

    A faux gas lantern in Harvard Yard recalls London at the turn of the last century.

  • Campus & Community

    Efficiency program saves money, energy

    An energy-efficiency program in Harvard-managed buildings has University real estate managers smiling at savings of more than $700,000 annually. Larry McNeil, senior facilities engineer with Harvard Real Estate Services’ University…

  • Campus & Community

    Warming world would see fewer summer breezes

    A group of climate researchers has shown that a warming globe over the next 50 years could result in fewer appearances of summer’s cleansing winds over the Northeast and Midwest…

  • Campus & Community

    Male body image

    Asian men show less dissatisfaction with their bodies than males in the United States and Europe, according to a Harvard study. This may explain why anabolic steroid abuse is much…

  • Campus & Community

    HBS’s Teresa Amabile ‘tracks creativity in the wild’

    If you were paid more money, would you produce more creative work? If that report languishing on your desk for months were suddenly due by the end of the week,…

  • Campus & Community

    Lasers produce slow, cold antiatoms

    A new way to make colder atoms of antimatter has been found. It could help bring scientists closer to understanding why we, and everything else, are made out of matter instead of antimatter.

  • Health

    Food ingredients may be as effective as antidepressants

    Researchers report that omega-3 fatty acids and uridine, two substances in foods such as fish, walnuts, molasses, and sugar beets, prevented depression in rats as effectively as antidepressant drugs. “Giving…

  • Campus & Community

    Ernst Mayr, giant among evolutionary biologists, dies at 100

    Ernst Mayr, the Harvard University evolutionary biologist who has been called “the Darwin of the 20th century,” died yesterday morning (Feb. 3) at a retirement community in Bedford, Mass. A member of the Harvard faculty for more than half a century, he was 100.