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  • Campus & Community

    Economist David Bell dies at 81

    David E. Bell, the Clarence James Gamble Professor of Population Sciences and International Health Emeritus, died Sept. 6, 2000, after a brief illness. He was 81. An economist who served as special assistant under President Truman and as director of the U.S. Bureau of the Budget and of the Agency for International Development (USAID) under…

  • Campus & Community

    Art museums reach out to local community

    The Harvard Art Museums (HUAM) are eager to help local schools plan curricula, arrange student visits, and generally make their superb collections available to the Cambridge community. That was the message museum officials conveyed Aug. 22 when they hosted a group of 70 Cambridge school administrators for a morning of talks and gallery tours. Later,…

  • Health

    Sights set on partial corneal transplants

    “We don’t have any way of curing these problems,” says Nancy Joyce, a Harvard researcher who is working on saving people’s sight when their corneas deteriorate. “The only way right now is full corneal transplantation, healthy tissue and all. In our work, we’re trying to facilitate replacement of the diseased tissue only.” To do that,…

  • Science & Tech

    Chandra clinches case for missing-link black hole

    Using NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory, scientists have zeroed in on a mid-mass black hole in the galaxy M82. This black hole – located 600 light years away from the center of a galaxy – may represent the missing link between smaller stellar black holes and the supermassive variety found at the centers of galaxies. The…

  • Health

    Sharp declines in heart disease in women

    During the course of a 14-year study, female participants’ consumption of red meat dropped by nearly 40 percent, intake of trans fats dropped by more than 30 percent, and use of high-fat dairy products decreased by more than 40 percent. These changes were complemented by increases in consumption of cereal fiber, folic acid, and fish.…

  • Health

    Mapping the brain’s response to breathlessness

    In an experiment, healthy men were placed on ventilators, and their ability to take deep breaths was controlled. As their breathing was regulated, their brains were imaged using a PET camera. The images were then compared to scans taken prior to the experiment to see which areas, if any, were turned on when the body…

  • Campus & Community

    Galbraith Receives Medal of Freedom

    Economist John Kenneth Galbraith was awarded the nation’s highest civilian honor, the Presidential Medal of Freedom, at a ceremony, August 9, at the White House. Galbraith, the Paul M. Warburg Professor of Economics Emeritus, has been a member of the Harvard faculty for 52 years. Known for his many books on economics and social dynamics,…

  • Campus & Community

    Now you see ’em: Kennedy School project looks for vanishing voters

    As presidential candidates Al Gore and George W. Bush rev up their campaign bandwagons, charging out of the summer political conventions and into the fall election cycle ahead, many of the nation’s voters can muster up nothing more than a yawn to reflect their disinterest in the entire affair. It is that sentiment that most…

  • Campus & Community

    Defining genocide: Allan Ryan uses his legal knowledge to find ways to classify terror

    Gray-bearded and slightly rumpled, Allan Ryan peers over the top of his reading glasses. He has just been thrown the question of whether personal passion is what drives his interest in the prosecution of war criminals and human rights offenders. There is a long pause, a lawyerly pause, perhaps. Ryan is, after all, an attorney…

  • Campus & Community

    Two SPH researchers receive awards

    John Spengler, the Akira Yamaguchi Professor of Environmental Health and Human Habitation in the Department of Environmental Health at the School of Public Health (SPH), was honored in London recently by the Royal Society for the Promotion of Health for his long career of improving urban health and indoor air quality. Spengler, who directs the…

  • Campus & Community

    A great tradition: Cambridge and Harvard host Senior Picnic

    There was singing, dancing, and catching up with old friends under bright blue skies in Tercentenary Theatre on Aug. 10, as Harvard hosted approximately 700 Cambridge senior citizens at the 25th annual Senior Picnic. “It’s a chance to meet all our old friends, the environment is nice, and we get a chance to meet the…

  • Campus & Community

    ‘Public Theologians’: Summer Leadership Institute ‘keeps it real’

    “Keep it real!” Sometimes declared as a warning and other times said in jest, this expression came up repeatedly during the 2000 Summer Leadership Institute (SLI), which brought 45 clergy, lay leaders, and community developers from across the country to Harvard. SLI, a two-week training program designed to aid these participants in better serving their…

  • Campus & Community

    Police Log

    The following is a portion of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department for the week ending Aug. 12. The official log is located at police headquarters, 29 Garden St. Aug. 7: A caller reported the theft of her bicycle from the Gutman Library. A caller reported the theft of a bicycle at…

  • Campus & Community

    Oxford Street will be closed for at least four weeks

    The city of Cambridge is nearing completion of its evaluation of pipe conditions under Oxford Street and may have a plan of action by Labor Day. The preliminary recommendations include pipe lining of portions north and south of Everett Street and some spot repairs where lining is not feasible. Oxford Street will continue to be…

  • Campus & Community

    Oliver Oldman receives National Tax Association Medal

    The Law School’s Oliver Oldman has received the National Tax Association (NTA) Daniel M. Holland Medal. Founded in 1907, NTA is the leading association of tax professionals dedicated to advancing understanding of the theory and practice of public finance. The National Tax Association is a nonpartisan, nonpolitical, educational association that fosters study and discussion of…

  • Campus & Community

    Notes

    Oldest U.S.-Japan student exchange program hosts forum The annual Japan-American Student Conference (JASC) is being held for the 52nd time in the organization’s 66-year history; it began July 21 and will continue to Aug. 20. Entirely organized and managed by and for university students, JASC meetings alternate yearly between the United States and Japan, and…

  • Campus & Community

    NewsMakers

    Beer elected to British Academy Samuel H. Beer, Eaton Professor of the Science of Government Emeritus in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, was elected Corresponding Fellow of the British Academy at the July 6 meeting of the Fellows of the Academy. Postdocs receive Runyon-Winchell Fellowships Paula Cramer and Chuan He were among the 18…

  • Campus & Community

    Newman appointed executive dean at Kennedy School

    J. Bonnie Newman, former senior aide to President George Bush and currently a senior public affairs and government relations consultant, has been named Executive Dean at the Kennedy School of Government, announced Dean Joseph S. Nye Jr. The Executive Dean is the senior administrative officer of the Kennedy School. Newman will join the senior management…

  • Campus & Community

    Hypnosis found to alter the brain: Subjects see color where none exists

    People have been hypnotized to see color where only shades of gray exist, and to see gray when actually looking at brightly colored rectangles. That result wouldn’t be so surprising at a carnival or stage show, but it comes from a tightly controlled scientific experiment done at a Harvard University medical facility. Researchers separately hypnotized…

  • Campus & Community

    Local groups receive grant money from Harbus Foundation

    Helping underachieving high school students raise their test scores to go to college. Buying books for a growing library at a pilot middle school. Providing support for an innovative job training initiative for low-income families. These programs, and others like them, are being rewarded for their excellence by the Harbus Foundation, an offshoot of The…

  • Campus & Community

    GSE program stresses teamwork for educators

    “We’ve lost our focus. We think we’re in neutral,” admitted Faye Bradley, curriculum director at Ohio’s Madison Local School District. “As hard as we try to focus on one mission, our staff development is all over the place. “We’re stuck,” she said with finality. But the assessment wasn’t the last word on Madison schools. Along…

  • Campus & Community

    Giles named Nieman Foundation 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

    New director named at Harvard Genomics Center

    Jeremy R. Knowles, Dean of Harvard’s Faculty of Arts and Sciences (FAS), has appointed Andrew Murray, professor of molecular and cellular biology, director of the Faculty’s Center for Genomics Research. Murray, who will join the FAS Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology as he takes up his new duties, comes to Harvard from 11 years…

  • Campus & Community

    Potential drugs from nature land researcher national award

    David A. Evans, Abbott and James Lawrence Professor of Chemistry, will be honored on Aug. 22 by the American Chemical Society for developing strategies for making potential drugs derived from nature. He will receive the 2000 Arthur C. Cope Scholar Award at the national meeting of the world’s largest society of chemists in Washington, D.C.…

  • Campus & Community

    What’s your risk of cancer?

    To find out, look into http://www.yourcancerrisk.harvard.edu. The site provides personalized, interactive information about your chances of getting breast, prostate, lung, colon, bladder, melanoma, uterine, kidney, ovarian, cervical, stomach, and pancreatic cancer. After answering a few questions, the site gives you information about your risk levels in the form of a bar graph. Then you can…

  • Campus & Community

    It’s a hit: Baseball camp scores with kids

    More than 200 children were hitting, fielding, and rounding bases on Harvard’s baseball diamonds this summer during three weeklong baseball camps designed not just to keep the kids busy, but also to teach the finer points of the game. Their enthusiasm led Harvard Baseball Coach Joe Walsh to conclude that “99 percent of them are…

  • Campus & Community

    A class with character : Drama students are encouraged to act up

    Ceren Gurkan, a high school student from Rome, wasn’t exactly channeling Beatrice, an upper-crust British lady. She was Beatrice. Or Beatrice was she or — something. This summer in the Loeb Drama Center’s basement dance studio, it isn’t always easy to tell who is who. There, every Monday and Wednesday morning, 20 actors and would-be…

  • Health

    Hypnosis found to alter the brain

    “Hypnosis has a contentious history,” notes Stephen Kosslyn, professor of psychology at Harvard and leader of a study in which people were hypnotized to see color where only shades of gray exist, and to see gray when actually looking at brightly colored rectangles. “Some insist it’s a state of mind that differs from normal states…

  • Science & Tech

    Cosmic ‘superbubbles’ bespeak toil and trouble

    The merging Antennae Galaxies in constellation Corvus are producing massive bubbles of expanding X-ray-emitting gas at such astonishing rates that they are bumping into each other. Giuseppina Fabbiano, Andreas Zezas and Stephen Murray of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics used NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory to capture in unprecedented detail this phenomenon. Fabbiano said that the…

  • Health

    Nearly half of college students used tobacco in one-year period

    In 2000, nearly one-half of college students reported using tobacco products in the previous year. By including the use of cigars and smokeless tobacco, a study found a greater prevalence of tobacco use among college students than have previous reports that looked only at cigarette use. Although about 28 percent of both male and female…