All articles
-
Campus & Community
A message from the Presidential search committee
More information can be found on the web site: http://presidentialsearch.harvard.edu/
-
Campus & Community
Police Log
Following are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department (HUPD) for the week ending Sept. 16. The official log is located at Police Headquarters, 29 Garden St. Sept. 4: A caller reported three black males robbed him at knife point. The area was searched with negative results. Cambridge Police and State…
-
Campus & Community
When canoes fly: move puts crafts in suitable environment
It was a modest armada. Last week, Peabody Museum staff removed 28 canoes, kayaks, outriggers, and dugouts from the sixth floor of the Herbarium and Botanical Museum where they had been stored for more than 20 years. The move was undertaken to enhance storage conditions and accessibility of the watercraft collection and to accommodate the…
-
Campus & Community
Giles named new Nieman curator
Robert H. Giles has been selected as the next curator of the University’s Nieman Foundation for Journalism, President Neil L. Rudenstine announced last month. Before coming to Harvard, Giles, 67, was a senior vice president of The Freedom Forum, a nonpartisan, international foundation dedicated to freedom of speech and of the press. He served as…
-
Campus & Community
Newsmakers
Georgi wins Dirac Medal for contributions to physics Howard Georgi, Mallinckrodt Professor of Physics, has been awarded the Dirac Medal for his pioneering work in theoretical physics. Georgi shares the prize with Jogesh Pati and Helen Quinn; they were recognized for their contributions to the quest for a unified theory of quarks and leptons and…
-
Campus & Community
Suspect wanted for assault near Leverett
According to Harvard University Police Department (HUPD), a woman affiliated with the University was assaulted while walking on the pathway behind Leverett Towers on Saturday, Sept. 16, between 10:45 and 10:50 in the morning. The affiliate told police she noticed a man on a bicycle, who then rode up beside her and grabbed her breast.…
-
Campus & Community
HLS students honored for community service
Sixteen members of the Harvard Law School (HLS) Class of 2000 have received the inaugural HLS Student Community Service Awards in recognition of their service to the Harvard Law School community. The Harvard Law School Council student government created the award and faculty, students, and staff nominated students. Dean Robert Clark and Dean of Students…
-
Campus & Community
Police call beating of Harvard student a ‘hate crime’
In what they are calling a “hate crime,” Cambridge Police are looking for two men who assaulted a Harvard undergraduate on Tuesday, Sept. 19. The assault occurred at approximately 8:35 p.m. in the rear of St. Paul’s Church at 27 Mt. Auburn St. According to police, the student was leaving a prayer meeting when he…
-
Campus & Community
GSE leadership program gets $3.6 million Gates grant
Giving many cause to celebrate the first day back to school in Boston, on Sept. 5 the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation announced a $3.6 million grant to the Harvard Graduate School of Education (GSE) to fund the Change Leadership Group, a national educator leadership training program housed under the Programs in Professional Education. The…
-
Campus & Community
Black alumni will gather at HLS celebration
More than 80 years after Harvard Law School (HLS) awarded a degree to the nation’s first black law school graduate, a group of defiant attorneys led by Harvard’s own Charles Hamilton Houston ’22 launched a lengthy and contentious court battle that would eventually topple the notorious “separate but equal” doctrine segregating blacks from whites in…
-
Campus & Community
Laying down the law: Zittrain wants to bring order to the Wild Wild Web
You might say Jonathan Zittrain was way ahead of his time. When the recently appointed assistant professor of law at Harvard Law School (HLS) was all of 12 years old and most of his friends were whiling away their summer days riding their bicycles or playing baseball, young Jonathan was hammering away on the keyboard…
-
Campus & Community
Weatherhead Center for International Affairs names 2000-01 fellows
The Weatherhead Center for International Affairs has named 21 international affairs practitioners from around the world as fellows for 2000-01. Established in 1958, with the founding of the Center, the Fellows Program welcomes mid- to senior-level diplomats, military officers, politicians, journalists, and others working in the realm of international affairs to pursue independent study and…
-
Campus & Community
Increase in criminal vehicle incidents in Allston area
Criminal incidents involving motor vehicles in the area in and around the Business School campus and athletic facilities have increased in the last few months, according to the Harvard University Police Department (HUPD). The incidents include thefts of motor vehicles and license plates, and breaking into motor vehicles. The on-campus incidents have occurred in the…
-
Campus & Community
Partial ceiling collapse at Stoughton Hall spurs inspection
All’s well at Stoughton Hall following a partial ceiling collapse last week. One freshman student suffered minor scratches when a portion of drywall and insulation came tumbling down from above just before noon on Tuesday, Sept. 12. Two others in the room were not hurt. A chair and a lamp were destroyed. All 128 residents…
-
Campus & Community
Shorenstein announces fellows
The Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics and Public Policy at the Kennedy School of Government has selected five distinguished journalists and scholars as the 2000 Fall Fellows. Among the fellows are a chief researcher for the Science Office of Sun Microsystems, and a correspondent from The New York Times. The fellows will spend the…
-
Campus & Community
Raise high the roof beam
Workers repaired the building’s leaky roof in work that began this summer and is slated to be completed in October.
-
Campus & Community
Provost grants to promote interchange
Provost Harvey V. Fineberg has announced a new round of grants under the Provost’s Fund for Student Collaboration. These grants are designed to promote intellectual interchange across faculties of the University. The deadline for grant applications is Oct. 6. “The idea for this program originated with the students themselves,” said Fineberg. “I am pleased that…
-
Campus & Community
Grants help Pluralism Project cultivate ‘national conversation
The Ford Foundation recently awarded a grant of $641,000 in supplemental support to the Pluralism Project for “development of a project that serves as a national research and policy resource on world religions in America.” For the past two years, funding from the Ford Foundation has enabled the Pluralism Project to generate new research and…
-
Campus & Community
PBHA brings Harmony to the children
The four boys clustered around the drum pounded it rhythmically — almost — filling the small gymnasium with sound and sending tobacco bits ritually sprinkled on the drum’s skin bouncing into the air. “We didn’t know we’d be teaching them rhythm,” Pauley said later. “A lot of (the program) is designed around what the kids…
-
Campus & Community
Location of Oxford Street barricades changed
With the completion of the city’s pipeline investigations, DPW has concluded that the portion of Oxford Street north of the Dworkin Driveway is in the poorest condition and must be protected. As a result, the city has changed the location of its street barricades to block all traffic from the section of roadway from the…
-
Campus & Community
Notes
President, provost offer office hoursHarvard President Neil L. Rudenstine will hold office hours for students in his Massachusetts Hall office from 4 to 5 p.m. on Tuesday, Oct. 3. Provost Harvey V. Fineberg will hold office hours for students in his Massachusetts Hall office from 4 to 5 p.m. on Monday, Oct. 16. Office hours…
-
Campus & Community
Carbon bits to revolutionize computer construction
A new way of building computers involves the world’s strongest material in the form of exotic tubes 100,000 times thinner than a human hair. Called nanotubes, they are a hundred times stronger than steel, able to bend without breaking, and efficient at conducting electricity. But to see them you have to look into a powerful…
-
Campus & Community
‘Stag’ faces changing times
Thomas Derrah doesn’t look much like a king. Wearing a Hawaiian shirt and baseball cap, he sits scrunched up in a front-row seat at the Loeb Drama Center, scribbling notes on a yellow pad. And yet, for the past decade and a half, Derrah has been a most convincing king — King Deramo of Serendippo,…
-
Campus & Community
Greenblatt named University Professor of the Humanities
President Neil L. Rudenstine has announced that Stephen Greenblatt, a world-renowned scholar of Renaissance literature, has been named John Cogan University Professor of the Humanities. With this appointment, Greenblatt joins a select group of Harvard professors “working on the frontiers of knowledge … in such a way that they cross the conventional boundaries of the…
-
Campus & Community
Rounding up the ‘Horses’: First U.S. exhibition devoted to Franz Marc’s ‘Horses’ opens at Busch-Reisinger
Harvard’s Busch-Reisinger Museum will present an exhibition offering an intimate look at Franz Marc’s (1880-1916) paintings of horses. “Franz Marc: Horses” brings together a selection of major works by this German Expressionist master in a special installation that explores the artist’s commitment to the spiritual intensity of color in interpreting the natural world. Opening at…
-
Campus & Community
East Boston gets helping hand
A below-market rent for a renovated East Boston apartment looks more than pretty good to Javier Loaiza, who is raising his daughter, Dahiana, by himself and feeling stretched a bit thin financially. “It looks like a paradise,” Loaiza said just before the Aug. 21 official opening of Siochain I, a low-income housing renovation project on…
-
Campus & Community
Divinity Hall to be rededicated
Amidst the anxieties, toils, pleasures, dissipations, and competitions of life, in the stir and bustle of society, and in an age when luxury wars with spirituality … we would devote these walls to the training of warm . . . generous spirits. — William Ellery Channing, in his address “The Christian Ministry,” delivered at the…
-
Campus & Community
Center for the Study of World Religions names new fellows
The Center for the Study of World Religions (CSWR) at the Harvard Divinity School is host to 32 fellows and visiting scholars from around the world for the 2000-01 academic year. Established in 1958 as part of the Harvard Divinity School (HDS), CSWR fosters excellence in the study of the world’s religions on the broadest…
-
Campus & Community
Labor director is named: Jones works to keep relationships respectful, consistent and fair
David A. Jones, who has served Harvard as director of Workforce Initiatives since January 1999, has been appointed director of Labor and Employee Relations. He replaces Kim Roberts who resigned in June to return to New York. Jones, who holds a J.D. from Howard University School of Law and an LL.M. in labor and employment…
-
Campus & Community
Law professor David A. Charny dies at 44
Employment and corporate law specialist David A. Charny, the David Berg Professor of Law at Harvard Law School, died unexpectedly, after a brief illness, on Thursday, Aug. 31. He was a resident of Cambridge. “All of us at Harvard Law School are shocked and saddened by David Charny’s death,” said Dean Robert C. Clark. “David…