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  • Campus & Community

    It’s more than just a beat

    Rapidly rising from his chair, and leaving a full plate of warm food, Patrol Officer Charles Marren of Harvard University’s Police Department (HUPD) grabs his cap from above the buffet line at Annenberg Hall and radios back to the University dispatcher, “52 to control, I have that.” Going “code,” with blue strobes pulsing and headlights…

  • Campus & Community

    Lee Fellowship: A commitment to public service

    In September 2001, about 18 senior public officials from Southeast Asia and China will exchange the summerlike days of Singapore for seven weeks of autumn at the Kennedy School of Government (KSG), and one week in Washington, D.C. These officials are the members of the first class in the new master in public management (MPM)…

  • Campus & Community

    Summit leaves Crimson seeing green

    Given the consensus among scientists, economists, and world governments on the devastating consequences of resource depletion, why is it that colleges and universities don’t put the environmental crisis front and center in their curricula and policies? Four hundred and twenty-four students, faculty, and administrators from 35 campuses convened last weekend at the Campus Environmental Leadership…

  • Campus & Community

    Cancer vaccineIt’s being tested on kidney and skin cancer patients with promising results

    Tumors were eliminated in 25 percent of patients with widespread kidney and lethal skin cancers who received a new cancer vaccine. Another 25 percent showed encouraging shrinkage of large and small tumors. Some of the 75 people who have received the vaccine saw their tumors melt away within weeks and remain gone for two to…

  • Campus & Community

    Notes

    President, provost offer office hours for students Harvard President Neil L. Rudenstine will hold office hours for students in his Massachusetts Hall office from 4 to 5 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 7. Provost Harvey V. Fineberg will hold office hours for students in his Massachusetts Hall office from 4 to 5 p.m. tomorrow, Nov. 3. Office…

  • Campus & Community

    HLS’s legal eagles fly for local community

    There’s nothing more “real life” than this: a notice to appear in court for nonpayment of rent. It’s an eviction notice, in effect, and there’s not much time to act on it. Frantz Marcelin is shaking as he holds the letter. He could have paid the rent, he explains, but he is waiting for his…

  • Campus & Community

    Faculty of Divinity Memorial Minute:James Luther Adams

    At a meeting of the Faculty of Divinity on April 17, 2000, the following Minute was placed upon the records. James Luther Adams – “JLA,” as he came to be affectionately known – was born in Ritzville, Wash., in 1901, the son of James Carey Adams, an itinerant Baptist preacher and farmer, and Leila Mae…

  • Campus & Community

    Women’s History at Holyoke Center

    Female basketball players in knee-length bloomers and high socks, field hockey players in skirts that touch the grass, the cast of an all-female “Merchant of Venice” decked in doublets, capes, and beards – these are the images of a new exhibition on Harvard Women’s History at the Harvard Information Center in the Holyoke Center Arcade.…

  • Campus & Community

    Inside newsman Ted Koppel

    One of television’s most respected and familiar figures revealed some of the person behind the persona during an appearance at the Kennedy School of Government (KSG) on Monday night. ABC News “Nightline” host Ted Koppel touched on an array of sensitive topics ranging from journalistic integrity to presidential politics to spirituality while discussing his new…

  • Campus & Community

    Talk on Moriyama highlights symposium

    November 2, 2000 The sixth annual Edwin O. Reischauer/Kodansha Ltd. Commemorative Symposium was held on Friday, Oct. 13, at the Kodansha/Reischauer House in Belmont, Mass. In attendance were representatives from Kodansha; the Consul General of Japan in Boston, Tadamichi Yamamoto; and members of the Reischauer Institute of Japanese Studies, including faculty, visiting scholars, postdoctoral fellows,…

  • Campus & Community

    HBS students help send area kids to camp

    November 2, 2000 Ten children from Cambridge and greater Boston will be able to attend camp next summer thanks to a donation from approximately 300 Harvard Business School (HBS) Master of Business Administration (MBA) students. Over this past summer, in an effort to contribute to the community beyond HBS, the students held an auction raising…

  • Campus & Community

    Talking trash

    The Boston Area Student Environmental Leadership Conference at Harvard Oct. 27-28 served more than 1,000 meals to the 400 participants but generated only three bags of trash because of extensive planning with Crimson Catering. This number of people would normally have generated 80 to 100 bags of trash. Student planners asked for cloth napkins instead…

  • Campus & Community

    October unkind to men’s soccer

    After winning three straight contests in mid-October, a run that included the season’s first Ivy League victory over a tough Yale squad, the Harvard men’s soccer team has dropped three straight including an Oct. 21 shut-out by host Princeton. Things weren’t quite so grim for the Crimson, 7-6-1, 1-4 Ivy (at press time), in their…

  • Campus & Community

    Kick-off luncheon launches Community Gifts Campaign 2000

    Harvard’s annual tradition of giving back to the community is reaching out further than ever this year. Faculty and staff are being asked to open up their hearts and their wallets by participating in the Community Gifts Through Harvard Campaign 2000, with the fundraising goal set at $915,000. The campaign was launched at a kick-off…

  • Campus & Community

    Internet, the sequel: The Web of Academe

    A giant computer screen, flanked by smaller monitors, dominates the basement room on Cambridge Street, giving the impression you’re in Harvard’s version of Mission Control. You’re not. You’re in the control room for Harvard’s computer network and one of the control centers for a new Internet that’s abroad in the land – or at least…

  • Campus & Community

    Robert Iuliano named deputy general counsel

    Gazette Staff Robert W. Iuliano ’83 has been named the University’s deputy general counsel. He replaces Robert Donin who left Harvard in August to take a position at Dartmouth. An attorney in the Office of the General Counsel (OGC) since 1994, Iuliano has handled a broad range of legal matters including student affairs, tenure issues,…

  • Campus & Community

    Predicting the unpredictableJeremy Stein analyzes the vagaries of behavioral finance

    Precariously perched on a tiny scaffold 170 feet in the air over the Nevada desert last summer, Jeremy Stein anxiously contemplated an awe-inspiring feat – a bungee jump into a 13-foot-deep swimming pool in Las Vegas. Stepping off the ledge, Stein began his free fall, only slightly splashing the water as the cord whipped him…

  • Campus & Community

    New ‘Harvard Guide’ has it all

    The new edition of “The Harvard Guide,” the University’s official guidebook, is now on sale at the Harvard Events & Information Center in the Holyoke Center arcade. All information has been updated from the last publication of the Guide in 1998. Packed with 136 pages of “the faces, places, history and lore of America’s oldest…

  • Campus & Community

    Baha’i Club has dinner, discussion on Nov. 7

    The Harvard Baha’i Club will sponsor a dinner and discussion at 7 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 7 at Quincy House, Apt. 300, 58 Plympton St. The topic of discussion is “Is God transcendent above nature or immanent in nature? In either case, how is it possible to come to know Him, His will, His purpose?” If…

  • Campus & Community

    Harvard, M.I.T. team up on atom research

    Harvard University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (M.I.T.) have created the Center for Ultracold Atoms to tap the strengths of researchers at the two universities and engage a wider community of about 100 students, postdoctoral researchers, and faculty. The center, created with sponsorship from the National Science Foundation, will consist of two laboratories, one…

  • Campus & Community

    Fellowship helps medical scholars over the hurdles

    Overcoming obstacles has become a way of life for Olga Kandror. In 1984, the Russian-born cell biologist earned her Ph.D. from Moscow University, then got a research position at the prestigious Bahk Institute of the Russian Academy of Science. It looked like smooth sailing. “Everything was fine. I was very successful. Then the financing of…

  • Health

    New cancer vaccine being tested

    In studies at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston, tumors were eliminated in 25 percent of patients with widespread kidney and lethal skin cancers who received a new cancer vaccine. Another 25 percent showed encouraging shrinkage of large and small tumors. Some of the 75 people who have received the…

  • Science & Tech

    Does the Internet make markets more competitive?

    According to Jeffrey Brown of Harvard’s John F. Kennedy School of Government, the Internet’s power to allow consumers to engage in low-cost price comparisons online has affected the market for life insurance. Looking at data on individual life insurance policies, Brown found that a 10 percent increase in the share of individuals in a group…

  • Health

    Researchers learn to control dreams

    For years, scientists have been stymied in their quest to understand dreams because they are unique events that cannot be replicated.

  • Campus & Community

    Police Log

    Following are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department (HUPD) for the week ending Oct. 21. The official log is located at Police Headquarters, 29 Garden St. Oct. 16: A caller reported a stolen wallet from the SPH 1. Oct. 17: A wallet was reported stolen from the Malkin Athletic Center.…

  • Campus & Community

    Notes

    Waging a peaceful celebration In celebration of Women Waging Peace, a Kennedy School program, there will be a concert on Monday, Nov. 6, at 7:30 p.m. in Sanders Theatre. With Charles Ansbacher conducting, the concert will feature the Boston Mozart Orchestra and the Tanglewood Festival Chorus performing Beethoven’s Symphony No. 9. Tickets are $12-$26 for…

  • Campus & Community

    Crime numbers falling in several categories

    On-campus crime appears to be decreasing in several categories at Harvard University according to newly released crime statistics posted on the U.S. Department of Education Office of Postsecondary Education Web site this week. The comprehensive list includes figures on criminal offenses, hate offenses, and arrests. Some 6,000 colleges and universities across the country were required…

  • Campus & Community

    Former Nieman curator is honored

    Nieman fellows and alumni from around the world have raised more than $22,000 for the newly named Kovach Library at Lippmann House. The donations honoring former Curator Bill Kovach will be used to improve and expand the collection of books and other materials devoted to journalism. A plaque now hangs in the library area of…

  • Campus & Community

    Peaceful protests

    An expanse of well-groomed lawn separated two groups of deeply divided demonstrators last Monday (Oct. 23) at Tercentenary Theatre. While Harvard Students for Israel (HSI) rallied in front of The Memorial Church in support of Israel and a “long lasting peace” in the Middle East (above and below right), members and supporters of the Harvard…

  • Campus & Community

    Journal of African American Public Policy pays tribute to Higginbotham

    The Harvard Journal of African American Public Policy celebrates its 10th anniversary this year with a new issue that pays tribute to the Honorable A. Leon Higginbotham Jr. The journal, published twice a year, was founded by graduate students at the Kennedy School of Government in 1989. It is committed to an interdisciplinary examination of…