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  • Campus & Community

    Crimson softball plays hardball

    It just gets better and better for Crimson softball as close in on an Ivy League Title. On Tuesday (May 2), freshman Monica Montijo hit a single with the bases loaded in the bottom of the eighth inning to propel the Harvard softball team to a 1-0 extra-inning win over the University of Rhode Island.…

  • Campus & Community

    Study: For men, family comes first

    Having a job schedule that allows for family time is more important to young men than money, power, or prestige, according to a new study released today by the Radcliffe Public Policy Center. Eighty-two percent of men ages 20-39 put family time at the top of their list, keeping pace with 85 percent of women…

  • Campus & Community

    One powerful day

     Andrew Tache, 19, of the Mescalero tribe, dances at the Sixth Annual Harvard University Powwow at the Quadrangle Athletic Facility on Saturday.  Tache combs his hair before braiding it. Prior to leading the dancers, Eric Valle spreads the feathers used to decorate a friend’s headdress.

  • Campus & Community

    Koolhaas takes the Pritzker Architecture Prize 2000

    Remment Koolhaas, professor in practice of architecture and urban design at the Harvard Graduate School of Design, is the winner of the Pritzker Architecture Prize for 2000. The Hyatt Foundation, which sponsors the award, will present Koolhaas with the prize and its $100,000 grant on May 17 in Jerusalem. The Pritzker Prize has been considered…

  • Campus & Community

    Interfaculty Initiative helps clear the air

    Anyone who has ever visited Beijing in winter knows that air pollution is one of the city’s biggest problems. Homes, schools, offices all heat with coal – which also is the major source of electrical energy. The result is a pall of black soot that settles into people’s lungs and bronchial tubes, and produces an…

  • Campus & Community

    Law School Forgives Loans for Alumni in Public Service

    Harvard Law School (HLS) Dean Robert C. Clark has announced an extensive expansion of the School’s loan forgiveness program, making it one of the most generous programs of its kind in the country. The School’s Low Income Protection Plan (LIPP), the oldest program of its kind in the country, forgives loans for HLS graduates who…

  • Campus & Community

    Smashing roadblocks to diversity

    Approximately 200 Harvard middle managers got together at the Charles Hotel this past Friday, April 28, to discuss obstacles to staff diversity. The conference, sponsored by the Office of the Assistant to the President and the Office of Human Resources/Workforce Initiatives, focused on the roadblocks to achieving staff diversity and how middle management can help…

  • Campus & Community

    Charles Coulson, former director of Harvard Varsity Club, dies at 69

    Former Harvard Varsity Club Director Charles “Chuck” Coulson died on April 11, 2000, in Johnstown, Penn., where he was visiting family. He was 69. Coulson was a devoted long-time supporter of Harvard Athetics. A fixture at the University and a consummate host at both the Varsity Club and Harvard Faculty Club, Coulson was known for…

  • Campus & Community

    Potent cancer drugs made — Sea squirts provide recipe

    Sack-like sea squirts living on the sea floor make a complex anti-tumor drug hundreds to thousands of times more powerful than any cancer potion now in use. For the past six years, chemists have been trying to do the same thing more efficiently and without the ecological mayhem involved in scraping the squirts off Caribbean…

  • Campus & Community

    Franken, Lithgow lead laughs at ARTS FIRST

    Good luck keeping a straight face during ARTS FIRST 2000. Actor John Lithgow ’67 and comedian Al Franken ’73 will light up the marquee at the Pan-Harvard Comedy Carnival that kicks off tonight (May 4) at Radcliffe Yard. The humor continues through the weekend with several shows at five different venues. The carnival is an…

  • Campus & Community

    Rudenstine praises ‘far-reaching’ recommendations

    I received today (May 3) a copy of the final report of the Ad Hoc Committee on Employment Policies — a committee composed of faculty and senior administrators from across the University, which I appointed last spring to study issues relating to the contingent workforce on campus. I intend to study the report thoroughly and…

  • Campus & Community

    Recommendations

    Annual Cost: $2.44 million Workers affected: About 2,000 Harvard Bridge Program: What: On-site, free literacy and basic skills training Who: Unionized staff, casuals or employees of outside service contractors How Many: 1,100 eligible, 500 annually Cost: $1.4 million Health Benefits: What: Extend same health benefits as full-time employees Who: Harvard service employees who work 16…

  • Campus & Community

    Education key to upward mobility

    D. Quinn Mills, the Albert J. Weatherhead Jr. Professor of Business Administration at the Harvard Business School, chaired the eight-member Ad Hoc Committee on Employment Policies that for the last year has been examining issues surrounding Harvard’s contingent workforce and its lowest-paid workers. The Gazette recently discussed the Committee’s recommendations and the process that led…

  • Campus & Community

    Ad Hoc report calls for expanded training, benefits, new contract guidelines

    After more than a year of studying issues surrounding Harvard’s contingent workforce and its lowest-paid workers, the Ad Hoc Committee on Employment Policies released a report yesterday (May 3) recommending a groundbreaking program of greatly expanded worker education, an expansion of health benefits for service workers, and the adoption of University-wide guidelines on service contractor…

  • Campus & Community

    A Bridge to literacy, learning

    In an innovative move to bridge the gap between workers in low-paying jobs and those enjoying the nation’s booming new economy, Harvard University will launch a new workplace education program providing basic literacy and language skills and/or courses leading to a high school equivalency degree. The new “Harvard Bridge to Learning and Literacy,” which will…

  • Campus & Community

    Harvard Benefits

    Harvard offers a generous package of benefits and perks – including liberal time off, tuition assistance, a wide range of health plans and special perks like discount theater and movie tickets. Generous Paid Time Off • 1-4 weeks of vacation to start • Sick leave • 11 1/2 paid holidays • 3 personal days per…

  • Campus & Community

    Vorenberg memorial service set for May 10

    A memorial service will be held for Roscoe Pound Professor of Law James Vorenberg, a former Harvard Law School dean, on Wednesday, May 10, at 2 p.m. in Memorial Church, Harvard Yard. Vorenberg died on April 12.

  • Campus & Community

    Ruth Dixon Turner, professor of biology, dies

    Ruth Dixon Turner, professor of biology emerita, died Sunday in Meadow Green Nursing Home in Waltham at the age of 85. Turner was curator of malacology at the Museum of Comparative Zoology. She was a world-renowned expert on teredos, sharp-shelled mollusks that bore through wood and are popularly known as “shipworms.” For this reason she…

  • Campus & Community

    Kids rule at Sports Fest

    Mayor Thomas Menino joined hundreds of local youths, student athletes, and coaches last Friday (April 28) to kick off the annual Sports Festival held at Harvard. Designed to celebrate the culmination of this year’s Youth and Student-Athlete Collaborative program, the festival drew 1,200 local youngsters to learn from varsity student-athletes and coaches from Harvard, Boston…

  • Campus & Community

    Memorial service for Bellow set for May 25

    A memorial service for Harvard Law School professor Gary Bellow will be held on Thursday, May 25, at 2 p.m. in Sanders Theatre. The service will be followed with a reception in the Ropes-Gray Room in Pound Hall, 1563 Massachusetts Ave. Bellow died on April 13.

  • Campus & Community

    Mighty metaphors — Zaltman’s method opens the ‘windows of consciousness’

    When the Heinz Endowments of Pittsburgh, Pa., embarked on a mission two years ago to invigorate its Arts and Culture program, it turned to the Mind of the Market Laboratory (MML) at the Harvard Business School (HBS). What emerged from the lab was a multifaceted advertising campaign built around a series of energetic and colorful…

  • Campus & Community

    Spring silliness

    Eat, drink, and be merry — thousands showed off their spring fever during Springfest 2000 at the MAC Quad, coming out to support student bands, eat, compete, and enjoy the weather.

  • Campus & Community

    Police Log

    Following are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department for the week ending April 29. The official log is located at Police Headquarters, 29 Garden St. April 23: An act of vandalism was discovered in the Agassiz Theatre. April 24: Several parts were stolen from a bicycle in the Medical School…

  • Campus & Community

    Celebrating John Knowles Paine’s legacy

    Aaron Copland. Leonard Bernstein. Igor Stravinsky. John Knowles Paine. These four eminences were among 25 composers, musicians, and educators inducted into the American Classical Music Hall of Fame in 1998. The names of most of the inductees for that year are familiar ones, but how many people could guess which category – composer, musician, or…

  • Campus & Community

    Notes

    Organizers sought for next Ig Nobel event Organizers are sought to help produce the 10th Annual Ig Nobel Prize Ceremony, which honors individuals whose achievements “cannot or should not be reproduced.” Likely the world’s largest science-humor celebration, the event will be held at Sanders Theatre in early October and will be broadcast live over the…

  • Campus & Community

    Nieman reunion convenes some of world’s top journalists

    If a war had broken out somewhere last weekend, there’s a possibility the rest of the world might have missed it. That’s because more than 400 of the most heralded journalists from around the world set aside their notepads and laptops to gather at Harvard for the Nieman Fellows Reunion 2000. “It was pretty exciting,”…

  • Campus & Community

    Newsmakers

    Galbraith, Gould, and Whipple dubbed “Living Legends” John Kenneth Galbraith, Paul M. Warburg Professor of Economics Emeritus; Stephen Jay Gould, Alexander Agassiz Professor of Zoology in the Museum of Comparative Zoology; and Fred Whipple, Philips Professor of Astronomy Emeritus, were among 83 Americans named as “Living Legends” by the Library of Congress at a celebration…

  • Campus & Community

    NAACP Retreat

    The National Board of Directors of the NAACP attended its third board retreat at the Business School last week. President Neil L. Rudenstine (left) met with NAACP Chairman Julian Bond during a reception for the NAACP board at the Law School. Also in attendance was NAACP President Kweisi Mfume. Staff photo by Justin Ide

  • Campus & Community

    Five labor contracts settled last year

    In a recent remarkably productive period of labor relations activity, the University signed 5 new contracts with four of its unions between July and November of last year. Following is a list of Unions representing Harvard employees. Asterisks indicate those that have signed new contracts with the University since last July. * GCIU — Graphic…

  • Campus & Community

    Committee calls for expanded training, benefits

    A committee of faculty and administrators studying workforce issues at Harvard has recommended several groundbreaking initiatives. Central to these recommendations is a greatly expanded free, on-site workplace education program for the university’s lowest-paid employees, including those working for contractors. In addition the committee recommended a mix of health and other benefits and, for the first…