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  • Sidney Verba receives Uppsala’s Skytte Prize

    The Skytte Foundation at Swedens Uppsala University has announced that the 2002 Johan Skytte Prize in Political Science will be awarded to Sidney Verba, the Carl H. Pforzheimer University Professor and director of the University Library. According to the Skytte Foundation, Verba was chosen for his penetrating empirical analysis of political participation and its significance for the functioning of democracy.

  • BSC recognizes three with Barrett Award

    Two Harvard College seniors and one junior have been named recipients of the Joseph L. Barrett Award. Administered by the Bureau of Study Counsel (BSC), the award is named in memory of Joe Barrett 73, and is given to students who have enhanced the learning of others. This years recipients — Bartlomiej Czech 02, Matej Sapak 03, and Elizabeth Tippett 02 — were honored at an awards ceremony on Monday (May 13).

  • Marnon receives Bryant Fellowship

    Dennis C. Marnon, administrative officer at Houghton Library, has been named the recipient of the 2001-02 Douglas W. Bryant Fellowship. Marnon will use the fellowship to pursue his work on the recovery and description of Charles Olsons research notes on the life and works of Herman Melville.

  • Weissman internship recipients named

    For the past nine years the Weissman International Internship Program, established by Paul (52) and Harriet Weissman in 1994, has provided nearly 150 Harvard sophomores and juniors with the opportunity to participate in an international internship in a field of work related to their academic and career goals. The internship strives to expose students to other cultural, political, and economic systems.

  • Getting fluent in community service

    Eileen Chang 04, a history and literature concentrator in Quincy House, is committed to improving the Spanish she has studied since she was in junior high school.

  • Workforce conference stresses tolerance

    The Office of the Assistant to the President and Workforce Initiatives, Office of Human Resources at Harvard University, recently sponsored the Seventh Workforce Management Conference at the Law School (HLS). Focusing on Globalization and Diversity in the 21st Century University, the conference opened with remarks by President Lawrence H. Summers, who stressed the Universitys commitment to being the best in a tolerant, respectful, and civil environment.

  • Faculty of Arts and Sciences – Memorial Minute

    At a meeting of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences on May 7, 2002, the following Minute was placed upon the records.

  • Seeker of harmony honored

    Ada Jane Maxwell 02 likes to focus on things that bring people together, not keep them apart.

  • Kirby appointed next dean of Faculty of Arts and Sciences

    William C. Kirby, Geisinger Professor of History, will be the next Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences (FAS), President Lawrence H. Summers announced today.

  • Libraries to unveil new online HOLLIS catalog

    This summer, when Harvard rolls out the new and improved online HOLLIS catalog, library patrons – faculty, students, staff, and other researchers – will benefit from a number of new features. The entirely Web-based catalog has a new format and design, offering users a variety of new and more functional features, while giving users more control over their library transactions. Access to the HOLLIS catalog will be via the Harvard Libraries portal (http://lib.harvard.edu), which contains general information about the libraries, such as hours of operation and locations.

  • SPH professor presents practical guide to living with germs

    Scientists have shown that the kitchen sink – not the regularly scrubbed toilet – harbors the most fecal matter in the average home, carried there by unwashed hands after using the bathroom.

  • GoGreen

    As part of Cambridges annual GoGreen Month Celebration, Rob Gogan (left), waste manager for Harvard’s Facilities Maintenance Operations, receives a GoGreen Award for Harvard’s recycling work from Cambridge Mayor Michael Sullivan (right).

  • Greene named to direct Carr Center

    The Kennedy School of Governments Carr Center for Human Rights Policy has announced the appointment of Michelle Greene as its new executive director. A graduate of Dartmouth College and Harvard Law School, Greene brings an array of experience in law, management consulting, government, and human rights to the Carr Center.

  • Real-life hero Ford gets environmental award

    Actor Harrison Ford received the 2002 Global Environmental Citizen Award from Harvard Medical Schools Center for Health and the Global Environment Monday (May 13) for his efforts to protect the planets biodiversity.

  • ‘No laptops allowed’ at the Adams House printing press

    In this age of desktop publishing, on-demand printing, and more copy machines than pay telephones, its easy to forget where the whole thing started, but a visit to the Bow and Arrow Press in Adams House is a good place to refresh your memory.

  • Crimson baseball scores Ivy title

    Harvard pitcher Mark Wahlberg ’03, left, receives a high-five from shortstop Mark Mager ’02 as Nick Carter ’02 , right, looks on, after Harvard won the Ivy league championship by…

  • Virtual cases bring about real learning at HMS

    A year after having his arm blown off attempting to clear a land mine, Sgt. Jones is still in constant pain from the injury, despite taking many different precription painkillers and trying everything to numb the pain from experimental electric stimulation to a daily six-pack.

  • Genes for a better brain found

    Genes that have allowed brains to become larger and more complicated have been found and cloned by researchers at Harvard Medical School (HMS) and the California Institute of Technology.

  • ‘Globalization’ colloquium can be seen on Web

    The provocative 2002 Harvard Colloquium on International Affairs, which was sponsored by more than a dozen Harvard Schools, centers, and programs this past April can still be viewed in video format on the Internet. You can be a virtual guest at the more than a dozen panels that made up Globalization After September 11: Has Anything Changed? Former secretaries of the treasury Robert Rubin and Lawrence H. Summers were among the speakers. To see and hear the proceedings, visit http://www.international-colloquium.harvard.edu.

  • This month in Harvard history

    May 21, 1890 – A University statute combines faculty of the Lawrence Scientific School with the College Faculty (which is the same as the Graduate School Faculty) to form the 62-member Faculty of Arts and Sciences. There are 12 Divisions, with larger ones broken down into Departments.

  • Police reports

    Following are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department (HUPD) for the week ending Saturday (May 4). The official log is located at 1033 Massachusetts Ave., sixth floor.

  • Provost office hours

    Provost Steven Hyman will hold office hours for students in his Massachusetts Hall office from 4 to 5 p.m. today. Individuals wishing to meet with Provost Hyman will be welcomed on a first-come, first-served basis. A Harvard ID is required.

  • Report shows advancements made by lowest-paid workers

    A report released Wednesday (May 7) by Harvard Universitys vice president for administration details a series of actions taken by the University in the last three months to increase wages for service workers, enhance education and training programs, and develop long-term improvements in the climate for workers on campus. The report shows that the University is on schedule in its implementation of recommendations made in December 2001 by the Committee on Employment and Contracting Policies (HCECP) concerning compensation and employment practices for Harvards lowest paid workers.

  • The tortuous road to Harper’s Ferry

    On Oct. 16, 1859, John Brown and 21 men – 16 whites and five blacks – raided the federal arsenal at Harpers Ferry, W.Va., with the intention of distributing arms to Southern slaves and fomenting a violent uprising.

  • The Big Picture: A snapshot of the Harvard Community

    Marie Trottier has been in cereal and CD commercials, music videos and movies. Shes played a debutante, a dictator, and Elvis, complete with a white jumpsuit and sunglasses.

  • In Brief

    Directory artists needed

  • Du Bois Institute names fellows

    Henry Louis Gates Jr., director of Harvards W.E.B. Du Bois Institute for Afro-American Research and chair of the Department of Afro-American Studies, has announced the appointment of 12 new institute fellows for the 2002-03 academic year.

  • History of slavery

    David Brion Davis, professor of history at Yale University and one of the worlds leading authorities on slavery, delivered the Nathan I. Huggins Lectures last week (April 30, May 1-2). The three lectures were titled: The Origins and Nature of New World Slavery, 1819: Signs of a New Era, and The African-American Impact on American Abolitionism and Southern Responses to the Perils of Antislavery. The lectures were sponsored by the W.E.B. Du Bois Institute.

  • Conference explores Latinos at the crossroads

    Juan Flores of the City University of New York threatens to douse Columbia Universitys Rodolfo de la Garza with a bottle of water during a panel discussion on Latinos Remaking America Thursday (May 2) at the Graduate School of Educations Askwith Education Forum. Co-sponsored by the David Rockefeller Center for Latin American Studies and the Nieman Foundation, the forum capped a daylong conference at the GSE titled Latinos at the Crossroads, which released research from the book Latinos: Remaking America, edited by Thomas Professor of Education Marcelo M. Suárez-Orozco.

  • Close coverage

    The Harvard baseball team scored two runs in the bottom of the ninth to beat Brown, 2-1, in a one-game playoff contest held Wednesday (May 8) at ODonnell Field. With the victory, the Crimson clinched the 2002 Red Rolfe Division Championship. Harvard will host Princeton – the Lou Gehrig Division champs – in a best-of-three series this weekend (May 11-12) for the Ivy League title. The winner of that series will then advance to the NCAA Tournament as the Ivy League representative. The Crimson last won the Ivy title in 1999. First baseman Josh San Salvador 02 (left) puts the tag on a Brown baserunner in an unsuccessful pick-off attempt in Wednesdays action.