Year: 2010

  • Arts & Culture

    Looking at ‘Invisible Cities’

    Harvard students, in an eclectic art show, travel to real and imagined “Invisible Cities,” which simmer beneath the surface of the real.

  • Science & Tech

    Kicking the habit

    Clean, renewable wind and solar power may be the most-preferred fossil fuel alternatives, but their land-hungry collecting requirements make them difficult options for replacing more conventional power sources, according to a British energy…

  • Science & Tech

    An addiction to fossil fuels

    David MacKay, physics professor at Cambridge University and scientific adviser to the United Kingdom’s Department of Energy and Climate Change, outlines challenges facing efforts to eliminate fossil fuels from the world’s energy mix.

  • Campus & Community

    Harvard College, MIT launch pilot program

    Harvard College and MIT start pilot program that allows undergraduates at each school to access each other’s libraries.

  • Campus & Community

    Bill Gates to speak at Sanders

    Microsoft founder and chairman Bill Gates will visit Harvard April 21 and will speak about the importance of giving back to the community.

  • Campus & Community

    In last semester, ‘Last Lectures’

    As a prelude to graduation, seniors organize a “Last Lecture” series to receive advice from favorite professors.

  • Health

    Killer mushrooms!

    It is thought to have been responsible for the deaths of emperors. In parts of California’s forests, it is everywhere. It is the deathcap mushroom, Amanita phalloides, so filled with…

  • Arts & Culture

    ‘Walden’ for the 21st century

    In a lecture at the Harvard Divinity School, scholar Lawrence Buell examined the continuing relevance of Thoreau’s “Walden” and the importance of voluntary simplicity.

  • Campus & Community

    From Homeless to Harvard

    Everyone has baggage, but Lalita Booth’s is heavier than most.

  • Science & Tech

    Posing the Big Questions

    In 1900, renowned mathematician David Hilbert laid down a challenge to future generations: 23 handpicked mathematical problems, all difficult, all important, and all unsolved. Since then, countless mathematicians around the world have struggled…

  • Health

    Treatment resistance in some cancer cells may be reversible

    The ability of cancer cells to resist treatment with either targeted drug therapies or traditional chemotherapy may, in some cases, result from a transient state of reversible drug “tolerance.”  In…

  • Campus & Community

    Helping outside the classroom

    HASI organizes spring series of Family Events tutorial sessions.

  • Campus & Community

    Reflecting on a young life

    A freshman reflects on an eye-opening seminar session, designed to prompt Harvard undergrads to step back from the striving and ponder what life means to them, and what they value.

  • Campus & Community

    Behind the blue

    Harvard’s two new deputy police chiefs discuss their transitions, and what everyday life is like covering the University.

  • Campus & Community

    The greening of the Law School

    Harvard Law School moves aggressively to cut its greenhouse gas emissions and save resources.

  • Health

    A ‘mind-blowing’ day

    Vermont high school students explore the human brain, with help from Harvard scholars.

  • Health

    Understanding the deadly deathcap

    Biology Professor Anne Pringle is taking the study of one of the world’s most poisonous mushrooms out of the realm of adventure stories and into the world of ecology, in an attempt to better understand how it spreads.

  • Campus & Community

    The tale of the two-sport athlete

    This season, soccer’s Melanie Baskind ’12 makes her return to lacrosse — and it couldn’t have come at a better time.

  • Campus & Community

    Taking finance up the Red Line

    Stephen Blyth, managing director of the Harvard Management Company, doubles as a faculty member in the Statistics Department, bringing real-world financial acumen to studying numbers.

  • Nation & World

    Six from Harvard awarded fellowships for Australian research

    The Harvard Club of Australia Foundation recently awarded fellowships to six Harvard researchers who intend to undertake collaborative scientific research in Australia in 2010.

  • Campus & Community

    Around the Schools: School of Engineering and Applied Sciences

    A collaboration by the Foundation Alícia (Alimentació i Ciència), headed by chef Ferran Adrià of El Bulli fame, and the Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS) has led…

  • Campus & Community

    Clooney named 2010-11 Luce Fellow

    The Association of Theological Schools in the United States and Canada and the Henry Luce Foundation have named Francis X. Clooney, the Parkman Professor of Divinity and Professor of Comparative Theology at Harvard Divinity School, one of six Henry Luce III Fellows in Theology for 2010-11.

  • Campus & Community

    Social change at ground level

    Scott Ruescher’s interest in Latin America spawned a lengthy career in volunteer work — not to mention, he’s also a poet.

  • Campus & Community

    HBS faculty win McKinsey Awards

    Three Harvard Business School professors, Gary P. Pisano, the Harry E. Figgie Jr. Professor of Business Administration; Willy C. Shih, professor of management practice; and Clayton M. Christensen, the Robert and Jane Cizik Professor of Business Administration, were recently honored with 2009 McKinsey Awards, presented by the Harvard Business Review and the management consulting firm…

  • Campus & Community

    Photographic memory

    By a roundabout route, Robin Kelsey became an authority on photography, eventually becoming a professor in the field at Harvard.

  • Campus & Community

    HBS’s J. Sterling Livingston dies at 93

    J. Sterling Livingston, a retired professor at Harvard Business School (HBS), died on Feb. 14 from multiple organ failure. He was 93.

  • Campus & Community

    American Chemical Society presents two with awards

    Robert J. Madix, a senior research fellow in chemical engineering at Harvard’s School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS), and Sang-Hee Shim, a postdoctoral fellow in chemistry and chemical biology in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences along with her mentor Martin T. Zanni, an associate professor of chemistry at University of Wisconsin, Madison, were…

  • Campus & Community

    Andrew Mattei Gleason

    At a Meeting of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences on March 2, 2010, the minute honoring the life and service of the late Andrew Mattei Gleason, Hollis Professor of Mathematics and Natural Philosophy Emeritus, was placed upon the records. Gleason’s best-known work is his resolution of Hilbert’s Fifth Problem.

  • Campus & Community

    Gazette staffer recognized for poetry

    Sarah Sweeney of the Harvard Gazette has been awarded a $5,000 prize from the Dorothy Sargent Rosenberg Foundation. The foundation annually honors poets under the age of 40 whose work celebrates the human spirit.

  • Campus & Community

    Sisters in arms

    Qualification for the NCAA Championships has become something of a ritual for recent members of the Harvard women’s fencing team, a far cry from the sports origins on campus dating back to 1888, but not far removed from the year the team officially came into being in 1974.