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  • Campus & Community

    Appiah Named Director of South Africa Fellowship Program

    For years, Professor of Afro-American Studies and of Philosophy K. Anthony Appiah has espoused the ideal of bringing a multidisciplinary approach to the study of ethnic history and identification. Since arriving at Harvard in 1991, Appiah has worked to expand the consciousness of both blacks and whites when viewing the complexities of African history and…

  • Campus & Community

    Radcliffe Institute To Host South African Leaders

    While South Africans around the world celebrate their country’s Human Rights Day on Tuesday, March 21, Sheila Sisulu, the South African Ambassador to the United States, will be at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study attending a lecture by Pumla Gobodo-Madikizela, a former member of South Africa’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission. On the following morning,…

  • Campus & Community

    Notes

    The Harvard Gazette

  • Campus & Community

    Newsmakers

    The Harvard Gazette

  • Campus & Community

    Tending Her Gardens

    The Harvard Gazette

  • Campus & Community

    Seamus Heaney To Give Haviaras Lecture April 6

    Ralph Waldo Emerson Visiting Poet Seamus Heaney will give the inaugural Stratis Haviaras Lecture, titled “Room to Rhyme,” in the Lowell Lecture Hall, 17 Kirkland St., on Thursday, April 6, at 5:30 p.m. Heaney, a 1995 Nobel laureate and former Boylston Professor of Rhetoric and Oratory, will read from his new book, a verse translation…

  • Campus & Community

    Conference on Minorities And Women in Science Set for March 17 and 18

    The Harvard Foundation for Intercultural and Race Relations is sponsoring the Seventh Annual Science Conference, titled “Advancing Minorities and Women in Science, Engineering, and Mathematics” Friday and Saturday, March 17 and 18 in the Science Center. Feature events at the conference include student and faculty presentations of research, a keynote address, and a mentoring program…

  • Campus & Community

    Barlett and Steele Awarded Goldsmith Prize for Investigative Reporting

    The $25,000 Goldsmith Prize for Investigative Reporting has been awarded to journalists from Time Magazine by the Joan Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics and Public Policy at the Kennedy School of Government. In last Thursday night’s ceremony, Donald L. Barlett and James B. Steele were presented the Prize for their series, “What Corporate Welfare…

  • Campus & Community

    College Students Binge More Frequently, Survey Finds

    College students are drinking more and college administrators are enjoying it less, according to a nationwide study of binge drinking. Approximately one in four (23 percent) of more than 14,000 students surveyed admitted to frequent binge drinking, defined as consuming four, five, or more consecutive drinks at least three times in the two weeks prior…

  • Campus & Community

    Air Pollution Deadlier Than Previously Thought, SPH Study Finds

    According to Joel Schwartz, associate professor of environmental health at the School of Public Health, “Air pollution kills about 70,000 Americans each year. That’s more people than die from breast and prostate cancers combined. Air pollution is a huge public health problem.” The idea that air pollution is harmful is hardly new. However, critics of…

  • Campus & Community

    Practical Physics — David Weitz works with real materials on real problems

    When David Weitz says his experiment is ready to fly, he means that literally. Like into space. Weitz has had four experiments aboard space flights, including three on the Mir space station and one on the shuttle flight that hoisted an aging John Glenn into orbit. He has a fifth experiment scheduled to fly aboard…

  • Campus & Community

    2000-01 Undergraduate Tuition and Fees Are Set

    Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences Jeremy R. Knowles has announced that for the 2000-01 academic year, Harvard’s package of undergraduate tuition, room and board, and student fees will increase by 2.9 percent, to $33,110. This marks the ninth consecutive year in which the rate of increase has declined; the percentage increase is…

  • Campus & Community

    Harvard Wins Ivy Honors for Player of Week and Rookie of Week

    Harvard basketball senior captain Damian Long of Spokane, Wash., has been named Ivy League Player of the Week for the period ending March 5, while freshman guard Elliott Prasse-Freeman of Mercer Island, Wash., has earned Ivy Rookie of the Week honors. The duo helped lead the Crimson to a pair of road victories over the…

  • Campus & Community

    Police Log

    Following are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department for the week ending March 4. The official log is located at Police Department Headquarters, 29 Garden St. Feb. 27: A jacket was stolen from the coatroom at the Sackler Museum. A parked car in Holyoke Center garage was struck by another…

  • Campus & Community

    Dropping Dyslexia’s Baggage

    Juliana Paré-Blagoev believes that brain scan studies will not only yield scientific clues for furthering treatment of dyslexia, but also subtle, easily overlooked benefits–such as a sense of hope, that may come simply from the subjects’ participation in a brain-imaging experiment. “How do people with dyslexia think about their disability?” Paré-Blagoev wonders, “and how does…

  • Campus & Community

    Bott Wins Israel’s Wolf Foundation Prize in Mathematics

    The Wolf Foundation, an Israel-based organization dedicated to the promotion of science and art, has named Raoul Bott, the William Caspar Graustein Research Professor of Mathematics, winner of the 2000 Wolf Foundation Prize in mathematics. He shares the prize with Jean-Pierre Serre of the College de France. According to the Wolf Foundation prize committee, Bott…

  • Campus & Community

    Major Bach Exhibition Mounted by Students at Houghton, Loeb Libraries

    The life of Johann Sebastian Bach, from his music to his personal relationships with sons, students, and other contemporaries, is documented with selected original materials in an exhibition called “The Man from Whom All True Musical Wisdom Proceeded: Johann Sebastian Bach.” The exhibit at the Houghton Library and Eda Kuhn Loeb Music Library runs through…

  • Campus & Community

    Players Make Cancer Battle a Team Effort Student-athletes respond to Delaney-Smith’s openness in her fight with breast cancer

    Courtney Egelhoff leaned in close, her face just inches from her coach’s blonde, shoulder-length hair. Intent with concentration, Egelhoff combed and snipped. Combed and snipped some more. The scene was a bit unusual and strangely intimate. Five players and coaches were gathered in the Women’s Basketball Office in Lavietes Pavilion. Head Coach Kathy Delaney-Smith sat…

  • Campus & Community

    Honoring Two Former Cambridge Mayors

    President Neil L. Rudenstine hosted a lunch Tuesday, March 7, in honor of recently retired Cambridge mayors Frank Duehay (left) and Sheila Russell. The mayors and other guests were also celebrating the launching of Harvard’s 20/20/2000 affordable housing partnership, which includes a $10 million commitment to Cambridge. Photo by Rose Lincoln.

  • Campus & Community

    Ben Shahn’s New York

    The moment I stepped into the Ben Shahn exhibition currently at the Sackler Museum, I had the feeling that I was in the presence of something uncannily familiar, a world I knew through legend rather than experience. These street scenes that Shahn had captured on film in New York City in the early 1930s were…

  • Campus & Community

    Four Seniors Are Off to England as Harvard-Cambridge Scholars

    It’s not often opportunities like this one come knocking on a dormitory room door. So you can just imagine the reaction when 20 members of the Harvard-Cambridge Scholarships selection committee delivered the good news in person to the four Harvard seniors selected as this year’s recipients. Geoffrey Fowler, Joshua Goodman, Ilana Kurshan, and Elizabeth Nathan…

  • Campus & Community

    Provost Announces New Round of Grants To Promote Interfaculty Collaboration

    Provost Harvey V. Fineberg has announced a new round of grants under the Provost’s Fund for Interfaculty Collaboration. These grants are designed to promote intellectual interchange across Faculties of the University. The deadline for grant applications is Friday, April 14. “We have been very gratified at the wide faculty response to this program in the…

  • Campus & Community

    Notes

    Vacation Houses For Rent Harvard’s vacation houses on Sutton Island and Kittery Point, Maine, are available for rent to salaried faculty and officers of the University. Applications for weekly rentals for the summer months are currently being accepted. For more information and an application, call Harvard Planning and Real Estate at (617) 495-9367. Social Reform…

  • Campus & Community

    Newsmakers

    Callbacks Win A Cappella Semifinals The Callbacks, one of Harvard’s coed undergraduate a cappella singing groups, placed first in the Northeast Regional Final of the National Championship of Collegiate A Cappella, held in Northampton last Friday. The Callbacks will be one of six a cappella groups in the country to compete in the final competition…

  • Campus & Community

    Of Masks and Mirrors

    Erin Curran, 6, a 1st-grader from the Martha Jones School in Westwood, Mass., practices a wrathful roar while looking in a hand mirror after having her face painted inside the Museum of Comparative Zoology. Inside the MCZ’s Romer Hall, Jill Podel, 5, of the Waldorf School on Lexington, enjoys a mask from Gabon, Central West…

  • Campus & Community

    Laser Lights Way To Treating Advanced Lung Cancer

    The woman’s left lung had collapsed because a tumor blocked the airway leading to it. She could only survive in a hospital with the help of a machine that forced air into her lungs. This unfortunate condition made her an ideal candidate for a new procedure known as photodynamic, or light, therapy. Raphael Bueno, a…

  • Campus & Community

    Kovach Receives Goldsmith Award At KSG Tonight

    Bill Kovach will receive this year’s Goldsmith Career Award for Excellence in Journalism at an award ceremony tonight (March 9) at 8:00 p.m. at the Kennedy School of Government. Kovach, curator of the Nieman Foundation and ombudsman for Brill’s Content magazine, has been a journalist and reporter for 40 years, including 18 years as reporter…