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How Harvard Innovation Labs ventures are responding to COVID-19
The Harvard Innovation Labs recently announced how current and former venture teams are responding to the COVID-19 pandemic. Many current venture teams are creating products and services that have the…

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High-resolution pollution record reveals centuries of metal production
In a new study, scientists and archaeologists from the University of Nottingham, the Climate Change Institute at the University of Maine, and Harvard University, showed that the highest levels of…

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Faculty Council meeting — March 25, 2020
On March 25 the Faculty Council approved an emergency grading policy for the spring term 2020 and engaged in open discussion. The Council next meets on April 15. The next…
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Goldsmith Prize announces 2020 winner
The Goldsmith Prize for Investigative Reporting recognizes and celebrates journalism that promotes more effective and ethical conduct of government, the making of public policy, or the practice of politics. This year’s finalists include local, regional,…

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Coronavirus poses challenges to Election Day
As the presidential primary season unfolds, the Ash Center sat down with Miles Rapoport, Senior Practice Fellow in American Democracy at the Ash Center and former Secretary of the State…

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China’s leadership during the COVID-19 outbreak
The Ash Center sat down with Tony Saich, Daewoo Professor of International Affairs at Harvard Kennedy School and Center Director, for a conversation about the impact of China’s COVID-19 response…

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Cambridge Housing Alliance’s Workforce Program visits Harvard
Nearly two-dozen students from the Cambridge Housing Authority’s (CHA) Workforce Program recently participated in the group’s annual visit to Harvard’s campus to take part in a series of programs designed…

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Finalists announced for Innovations in American Government Award
Today, the Ash Center for Democratic Governance and Innovation at Harvard University’s John F. Kennedy School of Government announced four finalists from across the country for its 2020 Innovations in American…

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Chemistry professors receive multimillion dollar grants
The Department of Defense recently announced the winners of their 2020 Multidisciplinary University Research Initiative (MURI) program. The agency received 365 proposals and awarded 26 grants. In a rare feat, they…

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Global flooring leader joins Harvard Chan SHINE community
Tarkett, a worldwide leader in innovative and sustainable flooring, has joined the the Sustainability and Health Initiative for Netpositive Enterprise (SHINE) at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health…

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Pre-operative treatment shows promise in oral cancers
A new clinical trial suggests that immunotherapy given before other treatments for oral cavity cancers can elicit an immune response that shrinks tumors, which could provide long-term benefit for patients.…

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Faculty Council meeting — Feb. 26, 2020
On Feb. 26 the Faculty Council met with Provost Garber to ask and answer questions as representatives of the Faculty. They also approved a proposal regarding simultaneous enrollment. The Council…
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Climate change affects Saharan dust storms
A new groundbreaking study shows that warming planet will make dust storms more intense in the Mediterranean and the Atlantic. Using the highest-resolution continuous climate record ever published, the study…

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A.R.T. and Guthrie Theater co-commission new work by Mark Rylance
The American Repertory Theater (A.R.T.) at Harvard University, Diane Paulus, Terrie and Bradley Bloom artistic director, and Diane Borger, executive producer have announced its partnership with the Guthrie Theater and…

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Colloquium showcases diverse approaches to East Asian Studies
A dozen seniors in the East Asian Studies concentration gathered recently to present their thesis research to an audience of faculty, staff, and fellow students. Limited to 10 minutes apiece,…

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How can cities balance ride-sharing and resident needs?
As ride–sharing, scooter rentals, and all manner of “micromobility” solutions have taken root in cities across the country, local government leaders are struggling with how to balance expanded mobility options against rising levels of congestion, curb space…

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How do bacterial species coexist?
A team headed by Rowland Institute fellow Katja Taute, and the AMOLF Institute’s Sander Tans and Tom Shimizu have discovered a new mechanism that explains coexistence of bacterial species. In…

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In a city defined by water, architects aim to turn threat to opportunity
Among American cities, Miami emerges as a particular case study in how and where we will house people as climate pressures mount. Its famous beaches and waterfront condominiums will struggle…

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For kids facing long hospital stays, a happier ‘reality’
Jean Jung was sick as a kid and spent several years in and out of the hospital. She was often lonely and bored. “The day goes really slowly,” she recalled.…

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Study finds patients frequently refuse insulin therapy
Patients with Type 2 diabetes who have high levels of blood sugar are at greater risk of serious complications such as chronic kidney disease, heart disease and blindness. While lifestyle…

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Harvard Innovation Labs introduces Spring Venture cohort
The Harvard Innovation Labs recently welcomed 350 student-led teams into its Spring Venture Program. Participating students come together from across Harvard schools to develop ideas and businesses in dozens of…

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At Radcliffe, students connect with Angela Davis’ activism
This winter, 11th and 12th graders from the TechBoston Academy class Co-DesignEnglish visited the Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America at the Radcliffe Institute. The course was…

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Faculty Council meeting — Feb. 12, 2020
On Feb. 12 the Faculty Council heard a proposal regarding simultaneous enrollment. The Council next meets on Feb. 26. The preliminary deadline for the March 3 meeting of the Faculty…
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Technology expertise in Congress?
The Ash Center recently sat down with Zach Graves, a 2019 Technology and Democracy Fellow at the Ash Center at Harvard Kennedy School, head of policy at the Lincoln Network,…

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January at the Business School: SIPs year three
Early in the morning on Jan. 22, it was 14 degrees Fahrenheit. But inside Shad Hall’s basketball court it was steamy, a DJ was blasting remixes, and three brothers were…

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Smith Campus Center wins Harleston Parker Medal
Harvard University’s Richard A. & Susan F. Smith Campus Center was recently awarded the Boston Society of Architects’ Harleston Parker Medal. Established in 1921 in memory of Boston architect J.…

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Harvard Votes Challenge prepares for elections
The 2020 election season is underway and the Harvard Votes Challenge — a nonpartisan, University-wide effort to encourage voter participation — is making sure the Harvard University community is ready. Today,…

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Dietary supplements largely unregulated, accessible to children
Pills and powders claiming to boost weight loss, energy, or sexual performance — available to customers of all ages on drugstore shelves — face little government oversight of their safety and…

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Rejuvenate Bio launches to help dogs live longer, healthier lives
The Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering at Harvard University announced today that Rejuvenate Bio has secured an exclusive worldwide license from the Harvard Office of Technology Development to commercialize a gene therapy technology…

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Confronting Climate Change across concentrations
The Harvard Center for the Environment (HUCE) tried something new this year: hosting a wintersession program. The three-day course, called Confronting Climate Change, was kicked off with a plenary session…
