All articles


  • Science & Tech

    Chandra discovers elusive ‘hot bubble’ in planetary nebula

    A planetary nebula (so called because it looks like a planet when viewed with a small telescope) is formed when a dying red giant star puffs off its outer layer, leaving behind a hot core that will eventually collapse to form a dense star called a white dwarf. According to theory, a “hot bubble” is…

  • Science & Tech

    What constitutes “community” online?

    How do we create online communities? Six panelists at the 2000 Harvard Internet and Society Conference struggled with the question. “Real world communities are ever so simple to create,” said Clement Mok, chief communications officer at Sapient. He attributes this to the “infinite bandwidth” of face-to-face contact, something online communities continually try to recreate. “We…

  • Science & Tech

    High demands, lack of control on the job damage health

    A new study has advanced previous research by linking job stress to broad, quality-of-life health issues such as carrying out daily household chores and general mental health. Previous studies have linked job strain to hypertension, cardiovascular disease, depression, and adverse birth outcomes. This study showed that job stress has broader health effects that worsen as…

  • Campus & Community

    Tennis everyone? Camps offer variety of classes

    One of Harvard’s – and Boston’s – most popular summer activities, the Tennis Camps at Harvard, will be opening its 10th season on June 12 at the new Robert M. Beren Tennis Center at Soldier’s Field. The Beren Tennis Center, dedicated on April 16,2000, has 18 outdoor courts with seating for over 500. The complex…

  • Campus & Community

    In the news

    As technology advances, educational entrepreneurs are taking advantage of new ways to reach potential students. Following are some recent examples of Internet-based learning venures: UNext: Michael Milken-inspired online venture involving Columbia University, Stanford University, the London School of Economics and Political Science, Carnegie Mellon University and the University of Chicago. Unext will be the parent…

  • Campus & Community

    Internet class is HBS’s business

    When the CEO of Click ’n Pick needs someone to clarify the company’s murky financial picture, who does he come to? Harvard Business School students – well, actually future Harvard Business School students. Click ’n Pick is a fictional company whose finances set the stage for one of three scenarios to be navigated by incoming…

  • Campus & Community

    There’s no place like home page: FAS course tools

    After teaching Microeconomic Theory for 14 years, Jeffrey Wolcowitz, senior lecturer on economics and the Faculty of Arts and Sciences’ associate dean for undergraduate education, decided in 1998 to rethink his presentation and explore use of the Internet. He began using an overhead projector occasionally to pose questions and problems for students to discuss with…

  • Campus & Community

    Technology at Work on Campus

    Distance learning and instructional technology are already all around us at Harvard – and they have been for a while. Following are several examples of current programs involving the use of technology on campus. Berkman Center for Internet and Society The Berkman Center for the Internet and Society is in its third year of offering…

  • Campus & Community

    New funding helps University reach out

    The technological revolution has spurred an array of educational changes that are modifying how students and instructors interact in a traditional classroom setting and creating new stay-at-home students for whom education is an Internet connection and a mouse-click away. The creative use of technology in education has always been encouraged at Harvard, and University officials…

  • Campus & Community

    Newsmakers

    2000 Goldwater Scholars announced Four Harvard students are among 309 U.S. sophomores and juniors selected as Barry M. Goldwater Scholars for the 2000-01 academic year. The students, with their houses and concentrations, are: Michael Aaron Hermele ’01, Leverett, physics/mathematics; Davesh Maulik ’01, Quincy, mathematics; Lucas Gregorio Nivon ’01, Winthrop, biochemical sciences; and Travis Jeremy Schedler…

  • Campus & Community

    Wahba new Meyer fellow

    The Joint Center for Housing Studies of Harvard University has named Sameh Naguib Wahba as the John R. Meyer Dissertation Fellow for 2000-01. The fellowship carries a stipend of $10,000 in support of a dissertation on a housing-related topic. The Joint Center is a collaborative unit affiliated with the Graduate School of Design (GSD) and…

  • Campus & Community

    Harvard happenings

    The Harvard Gazette

  • Campus & Community

    Bells carry historical appeal

    A peal of bells will ring throughout Cambridge on Thursday, June 8, 2000. For the twelfth consecutive year a number of neighboring churches and institutions will ring their bells in celebration of the City of Cambridge and of Harvard’s 349th Commencement Exercises. In a bow to earlier history, when bells of varying tones summoned people…

  • Campus & Community

    Tech talk

    We’ve all learned the language of computers, with their bits and bytes and RAM and ROM, not to mention hard drives and software, printers and ports, and most importantly: tech support. Below is a primer to the latest talk of technology called distance learning: Distance learning: Learning that takes place when the student and instructor…

  • Campus & Community

    Volunteers sought for art Voyage

    Do you have a passion for art? Do you enjoy working with young people? Do you want to make a contribution to your community? If you answered yes, and you are able to spare a few Saturday afternoons, then consider joining a corps of dedicated volunteers to help lead guided discussions and hands-on creative art…

  • Campus & Community

    Temporary relocation at University Hall

    In preparation for the upcoming renovations of University Hall, all departments in the building will be temporarily relocated. University Hall will close for business at the end of the day, Thursday, June 15. Offices will be relocated and will open for business on Monday, June 19, in the following temporary locations: 40 Oxford Street (Engineering…

  • Campus & Community

    Trautman memorial set

    A memorial service for Susanah Bailie Trautman will be held on June 2 at 10 a.m. in the Memorial Church, Harvard University. She was the wife of the late Donald T. Trautman, Shattuck Professor of Law.

  • Campus & Community

    Kinescopes, submarines marked early distance efforts

    Harvard’s Extension School began experiments with distance learning as early as the 1950s, offering courses via educational television. In the 1960s, the experiments continued, with classes offered via kinescope to U.S. Navy personnel on nuclear submarines. Another experiment in the 1990s involved using distance education to teach calculus to high school students in areas where…

  • Campus & Community

    Technology changes pace of learning

    Electronic mail and the Internet have become integral parts of our daily lives. These and other digital tools already have profoundly affected scholarship and learning at Harvard. Thousands of courses now have Websites, many rich with images, audio clips, video-on-demand, electronic discussion groups, and timely Web links. A growing number of digital library materials are…

  • Campus & Community

    NBC’s Tim Russert will give HLS Class Day address, Shine is named HST graduation speaker

    Tim Russert, NBC political analyst and Meet the Press moderator, will deliver Harvard Law School’s 2000 Class Day address on Wednesday, June 7, at 2:30 p.m. on the steps of Langdell Hall, 1545 Massachusetts Ave. “I am very excited that Tim Russert has accepted [our invitation] to be the Class Day Speaker,” said Class Marshal…

  • Campus & Community

    HBS lecturer, environmentalist, Sawhill, dies at 63

    John C. Sawhill, a senior lecturer at the Business School (HBS) and, during his distinguished career, a government official and leader of several major nonprofit institutions, including New York University (NYU), died of complications from diabetes on May 18 at the Medical College of Virginia in Richmond. He was 63. At the time of his…

  • Campus & Community

    Rockefeller Center awards travel grants

    Kimberly Collins, a sophomore from California, speaks Spanish and–like many Californians–has ventured to places in Mexico like Tijuana and San Miguel de Allende. But, she admits, she never quite expected to teach management skills and English this summer to staff members of a grassroots environmental organization in Bolivia with a grant from the David Rockefeller…

  • Campus & Community

    Laser lights up treatment of skin disease

    Nancy Stuart hated her body. Scaly, red plaques of psoriasis disfigured her arms, legs, trunk, and scalp. Summer was the worst time. She had to cover her entire body. Otherwise people looked at her in disgust or pity. No one would sit next to her on a bus. Seven months ago, Nancy (not her real…

  • Campus & Community

    Simple screening test could detect cancer lesions in gay men

    Just as use of Pap smears has led to a dramatic drop in cervical cancer, so screening for anal cancer among gay and bisexual men would save many lives at a reasonable cost, according to a study conducted at the School of Public Health and University of California at San Francisco (USCF). Anal squamous cell…

  • Campus & Community

    Police Log

    Following are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department for the week ending May 27. The official log is located at Police Headquarters, 29 Garden St. May 22: Media equipment in the Goldenson Building was vandalized. An ID was stolen at Winthrop House. A bike was stolen at Greenough Hall. Cash…

  • Campus & Community

    Henry Luce Foundation renews support for Divinity School’s urban ministry program

    Harvard Divinity School has announced that the Henry Luce Foundation has approved a three-year grant of $240,000 to continue support for the School’s program in urban ministry. “This splendid renewal grant from the Luce Foundation will greatly help the School to give better preparation to students who want to be effective ministers in inner-city communities,”…

  • Campus & Community

    Law School adds six to faculty

    The Law School has appointed six persons to the faculty, the largest addition of new faculty members during Robert C. Clark’s deanship, which began in 1989. Two received lateral appointments to professorships; the other four are new appointments to assistant professorships. The appointments will take effect on July 1, 2000, and will increase the size…

  • Campus & Community

    Kheirallah memorial set

    A small memorial gathering of friends of Mohammad Kheirallah, who died of a heart attack on May 19, will be held on Sunday, June 4, at 11:00 a.m. in his apartment, number 13, at 17 Bow Street, Union Square, Somerville. For further information, contact Hammam Akbik at (617) 957-1716.

  • Campus & Community

    University-wide initiative gives peace a chance

    Suppose you wanted to start a company. You would probably have little trouble finding advisers, consultants, workshops, and textbooks to guide you each step of the way and warn you of possible pitfalls. But what if you wanted to start a nation? National start-ups may be less common than corporate ones, yet they do exist,…