All articles


  • Campus & Community

    First string — Violinist Joseph Lin ’00 and friends to perform benefit concert for PBHA

    This isn’t your ordinary student concert. Not that any of Harvard’s talented undergraduate musicians can be called ordinary, but even in such brilliant company the star of this event shines with a unique luster. Joseph Lin ’00, a concentrator in the Study of Religion and a resident of Mather House, also happens to be one…

  • Campus & Community

    On the FAS track

    Faculty of Arts and Sciences Dean Jeremy R. Knowles (center) speaks with Tim Cross (left) associate dean for finance and administration at the Divinity School, and Leonard Solomon, research program manager in DEAS. Solomon was among four recipients of the FAS Administrative/Professional Prize. Every two years, FAS honors up to four members of the exempt…

  • Campus & Community

    YWCA to honor Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham as Woman Achiever

    Professor of History and African-American Studies Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham is among 12 women who will be inducted into the YWCA Boston’s Academy of Women Achievers Class of 2000 in a special ceremony on Tuesday, June 6. The Academy was founded six years ago by Marti Wilson-Taylor, YWCA Boston’s president and CEO, to recognize women who…

  • Campus & Community

    UIS assesses ‘love bug’ aftermath

    University Information Systems (UIS) is still working to assess the damage from last week’s pesky ILOVE YOU virus that struck e-mail systems worldwide. Disguised as an e-mail attachment, the virus apparently emanated from the Philippines, and spread primarily through Microsoft’s Outlook Express e-mail program, by sending copies of itself to others in the victims’ address…

  • Campus & Community

    Seniors are awarded Stride Rite fellowships

    While many Harvard graduates will seek their fortunes around the world, three of their classmates will remain in Boston next year living on $25,000 fellowships and pursuing community-based public service work. The three graduating seniors – Joseph Garland of Deer Isle, Maine; Amy Leung of Quincy; and Ari Lipman of Chevy Chase, Md. – received…

  • Campus & Community

    Damon, Affleck rally to living wage cause

    Former Harvard student Matt Damon and Cambridge native Ben Affleck added their voices – and drawing power – Saturday to the chorus of Harvard students, Cambridge City Councilors, and others calling on the University to adopt a $10.25 per hour living wage. The pair was the highlight of a two-hour rally on the steps of…

  • Campus & Community

    Research physicist Harrison Radford dies at 72; memorial planned for May 13

    Harrison E. Radford, a molecular spectroscopist who conducted research at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics (formerly the Harvard College Observatory) from 1969 until his retirement in 1992, died on May 5, 2000, after a long struggle with ALS (Lou Gehrig’s Disease). A memorial service for Radford will be held on Saturday, May 13, at 11…

  • Campus & Community

    Police Log

    Following are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department for the week ending May 6. The official log is located at Police Headquarters, 29 Garden St. April 30: An individual was arrested at North Hall for assault and battery and malicious destruction. A bicycle was stolen from Gund Hall. A bicycle…

  • Campus & Community

    24 juniors elected to Phi Beta Kappa

    Twenty-four juniors have been elected to Phi Beta Kappa. Their names and houses are as follows: Andreea Simona Balan, Currier; Jennifer Belli, Winthrop; Emma Richardson Burbank-Schmitt, Quincy; Nadarajan Chetty, Pforzheimer; Peter Ciganik, Kirkland; Eli Louis Diamond, Cabot; Andrew James Heckerling, Eliot; Angie Deborah Heo, Cabot; Andrew Ja-way Kin, Cabot; William Henry Kitchens, Currier; David Evan…

  • Campus & Community

    Living legend — Coach Harry Parker changed college crew forever

    Much has been said and written about Men’s Heavyweight Crew Coach Harry Parker over the course of the near half-century he has been involved in crew. He is one of a select few living legends here at Harvard who can still be seen day in and day out just doing his job. Arguably the best-known…

  • Campus & Community

    Notes

    Rabbi Whiman to preach ninth Judaic-Christian Dialogue Rabbi David A. Whiman, senior rabbi of Congregation Beth Israel in Houston, will give this year’s Judaic-Christian Dialogue at the Memorial Church on Sunday, May 14, at 11 a.m. Whiman was ordained from the Hebrew Union College in Cincinnati in 1979 and served Congregation Beth Israel in Houston…

  • Campus & Community

    SPH research attacks mosquito-borne virus

    A virus that had never been seen in the Western Hemisphere until it killed seven people last fall in New York has re-emerged, and researchers from the School of Public Health (SPH) are working with Massachusetts officials to guard against an outbreak here. Last August, birds began dying in New York City, and tests identified…

  • Campus & Community

    Arnold Arboretum blooms for Lilac Sunday

    They are bright and beautiful, aromatic, and full of life. For five weeks every spring, colorful lilacs dominate New England gardens, with a span of hues ranging from rich reds to deep blues to festive pinks to majestic whites. Perhaps the most impressive display around can be found at the Arnold Arboretum, where more than…

  • Campus & Community

    Ira Jackson ’70 is named director of Center for Business and Government

    Ira A. Jackson ’70, former executive vice president of BankBoston Corporation, has been named director of the Center for Business an Government at the Kennedy School of Government, Dean Joseph S. Nye announced on Monday, May 8. “It is a pleasure to welcome Ira Jackson back to the Kennedy School where he began his illustrious…

  • Campus & Community

    Room for North House at the top

    Hey, Mister Cabdriver Said, where the hell are you taking me? I know this ain’t the way back to my home Cuz I sleep alone And I know I always leave my light on Just to show my way back home When they started jammin’ together two years ago, Al Bennett, a Harvard senior concentrating…

  • Campus & Community

    Three Harvard students win Hofer Prize in collecting

    Diana I. Williams ’95, a doctoral candidate in the history of American civilization; Daniel S. Adler, a doctoral candidate in anthropology; and Jason Vigna, Harvard Law School Class of 2000 have been awarded the Philip Hofer Prize in Collecting by the Harvard University Art Museums. Williams won first prize for a collection of books on…

  • Campus & Community

    FitNuts!

    Helping kids get fit for life is the goal of FitNut, a fitness and nutrition program run by Harvard students as part of Project HEALTH, a specal project of the Institute of Politics, Boston Medical Center, and BankBoston. Nine boys and nine girls are involved in FitNut, which is divided into a girls¹ program and…

  • Campus & Community

    Faculty council notice — May 10

    At its 15th meeting of the year the Faculty Council received the annual report of the Coordinating Committee on Sexual Harassment. Representing the Committee, Deans Garth McCavana (Student Affairs in GSAS), chair, and Elizabeth Doherty (Academic Planning in FAS) were present for this discussion. The Council also discussed the distribution of death notices with Professor…

  • Campus & Community

    Exercise reduces cancer risk

    Being an athlete in college can win women a competitive edge against breast cancer, according to a new Harvard study. A 15-year follow-up of 3,940 female athletes and nonathletes revealed that the less active women had significantly more breast cancer than the more active women. Most of those in the study were graduates of Radcliffe…

  • Campus & Community

    Dudley’s budding celluloid heroes

    Olivia walked in the room, one hand clutching three beer bottles by the neck. She handed the bottles to friends sitting around a cluttered coffee table and settled on the arm of the couch, joining the conversation expertly, as if she’d heard it all before. She had. Several times before, actually. Olivia and her pals…

  • Campus & Community

    Mental health care doesn’t meet standards, study finds

    Only 14 percent of patients treated for three common mental illnesses – depression, generalized anxiety disorder, and panic disorder – received care that met with accepted standards, according to a new Harvard Medical School study titled “Recent Care of Common Mental Disorders in the United States” published in this week’s Journal of General Internal Medicine.…

  • Campus & Community

    Memorial service for Blank set for May 19

    A memorial service to celebrate the life of Irvin H. Blank will be held on Friday, May 19, at 5 p.m. in the Wellman 1 Conference Room, Department of Dermatology, Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH), Boston. Blank, a former research fellow at Harvard Medical School (HMS) and physician on the Dermatology Service at MGH, died in…

  • Campus & Community

    Art of entertainment

    Artists and performers in the Harvard community ushered in spring last week with the annual four-day arts extravaganza, Arts First 2000. Audiences had a wide variety of performances and exhibits to enjoy, and were led in the festivities by actor John Lithgow ’67 and comedian Al Franken ’73. Students and faculty staged dozens of plays,…

  • Campus & Community

    Report focuses on impact of power plant pollution

    According to researchers at the School of Public Health (SPH), air pollution from two Massachusetts coal-fired power plants contributes to particulate matter, sulfur dioxide, nitrogen dioxide, and ozone exposure over a large region. Using a sophisticated model of how particulate matter and its precursors are dispersed in the atmosphere, SPH scientists Jonathan Levy and John…

  • Campus & Community

    College admissions yield is nearly 80 percent

    Nearly 80 percent of students admitted to the Class of 2004 have chosen to enroll, the highest yield since the early 1970s, according to the Undergraduate Admissions Office. Yield, the percentage of admitted candidates who decide to accept an offer of admission, is considered a measure of a school’s competitiveness. Harvard’s yield is again, by…

  • Campus & Community

    Parents of Navin Narayan endow lecture series

    The Navin Narayan Memorial Lecture has been endowed by the parents of Navin Narayan ’99, a Rhodes Scholar and summa cum laude graduate in social studies who died of cancer this past March. Kalman and Kusuma Narayan’s gift will bring a speaker to Harvard each March “to lecture on topics including social problems and service…

  • Health

    Public health researchers battle West Nile virus

    West Nile encephalitis infection, carried by mosquitoes, can cause the brain to swell but rarely leads to death. Many people carry the virus with mild if any symptoms, but people with severe reactions may suffer convulsions, fever, and paralysis. There are no specific treatments for the disease. The virus had never been seen in North…

  • Science & Tech

    Gamma rays may be left over from cosmic construction project

    The origin of the diffuse and pervasive background of gamma-ray radiation that exists over the universe has been one of the great unsolved mysteries in cosmology. Even the known population of powerful extragalactic gamma-ray sources, called “blazars,” can account for no more than a quarter of the gamma-ray background radiation that is observed. According to…