All articles
-
Campus & Community
Harvard Planning and Real Estate Announces Affiliated Housing Rent Rates for 2000-01
Harvard Planning and Real Estate (HPRE) has announced approval of the new rent schedule for approximately 2,300 Harvard-owned apartments rented by graduate students and other University affiliates. The new rents will take effect July 1, when the 2000-01 rental season begins. The Faculty Advisory Committee on Affiliated Housing has reviewed the comments received from members…
-
Campus & Community
Police Log
Following are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department for the weeks ending March 25 and April 1. The official log is located at Police Department Headquarters, 29 Garden St. March 19: A bag was stolen from Rosovsky Hall. A cell phone was taken from Currier House. An elevator in Gund…
-
Campus & Community
Notes
Artistic freedom conference at Law School, April 14 The Harvard Law School Arts Panel will present its spring conference on Friday, April 14, at 2:30 p.m. in Hauser 104. The event is titled “Protected Speech or Just Bad Art? Artistic Freedom and the First Amendment in the Brooklyn Museum Controversy and Beyond.” Fred Schauer, academic…
-
Campus & Community
Statement of President Neil L. Rudenstine On Contingent Workforce Issues
Harvard is committed to providing fair and competitive compensation and a favorable working environment for all its employees. For the vast majority of our regular employees, we meet and exceed these standards. All of our full-time, regular employees earn more than $10 an hour in total compensation; all receive generous benefits; and all have access…
-
Campus & Community
Newsmakers
Butler and Gudrais Named Harvard Magazine Fellows for 2000-01 Kirstin E. Butler and Elizabeth A. Gudrais have been named Harvard Magazine‘s Berta Greenwald Ledecky Undergraduate Fellows for the 2000-01 academic year, when both will be seniors in the College. Butler, who lives in Currier House and comes from Geneva, N.Y., was an editorial intern at…
-
Campus & Community
Myles Mace, Expert on Entrepreneurship, Dies at 88
Former Harvard Business School Professor Myles L. Mace, a pioneer in the study of entrepreneurship and corporate governance, and a member of numerous corporate boards, died on Friday, March 24, in Natick, Mass. He was 88 and a long-time resident of Dover, Mass. Mace was born Oct. 10, 1911, in Montevideo, Minn. He received a…
-
Campus & Community
Three To Be Honored with Harvard Medal
The Harvard Alumni Association has chosen three alumni to receive the 2000 Harvard Medal: Charlotte P. Armstrong 49, L.L.B. 53; John G. Caulfield 50; and Louis I. Kane 53. First given in 1981, the Harvard Medal recognizes extraordinary service to the University. President Neil L. Rudenstine will present the Medals on Commencement afternoon, June 8,…
-
Campus & Community
Marine Science Review Established at Harvard
Harvard students have established the Harvard Marine Science Review, a new peer association of scientists, educators, researchers, and students dedicated to the advancement of the fields of ichthyology and marine sciences. The Review is intended to provide a forum for the presentation of research, ideas, theory, and debate, and to encourage the spirit of discovery…
-
Campus & Community
Law School Will Honor George Mitchell at Symposium
The Harvard Negotiation Law Review and the Harvard Program on Negotiation will honor former U.S. Sen. George Mitchell with the first “Great Negotiator Award” on Friday, April 7, as part of a two-day symposium on problem solving at Harvard Law School. The symposium, “The Lawyer as Problem Solver: A Symposium on Dispute Resolution and Deal…
-
Campus & Community
Diallo Family, Sharpton, Breyer Will Speak at Black Law Students’ Spring Conference
The Rev. Al Sharpton, U.S. Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer, Anita Hill, and family members of Amadou Diallo are among the guests scheduled to speak at the Black Law Students Association (BLSA) spring conference, April 7-9. The conference, titled “The Search for Excellence: Defining New Paths,” will be held in several classrooms at the Harvard…
-
Campus & Community
Kennedy Honored as ‘Champion of Science’
Senator Edward M. Kennedy gave the keynote speech at an April 3 luncheon of the Leading Industries Executive Forum hosted by the Greater Boston Chamber of Commerce. Kennedy devoted most of his speech to the importance of the partnership between the federal government, universities, and private industry in research and development to the regional economy.…
-
Campus & Community
Harvard Launches New Program on Business, Government and Education
Will the expanding role of business in American education improve the nation’s schools? Where can the private sector’s strong suits cost-consciousness, flexibility, and a focus on results be enlisted to boost the performance of the education system? And when is business involvement with schools risky or incompatible with the goal of quality…
-
Campus & Community
Law School Makes $100,000 In Enhancements To Hemenway Gymnasium
The Harvard Gazette
-
Campus & Community
Filmmaker/Lecturer Nominated for Oscar
If Wendy Tilbys name is called at Sunday nights Academy Awards presentation in Los Angeles, a roar of applause may be heard emanating from the Carpenter Center on Quincy Street. Tilby, a Visiting Lecturer who teaches two film animation courses in Visual and Environmental Studies (VES) at Harvard, has been nominated for best animated short…