Campus & Community

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  • Crew heavies head the Charles

    The Harvard mens heavyweight crew won its 12th straight race on the Charles this past Saturday (May 4), edging Northeastern by 2.8 seconds to remain perfect on the spring. The win wrecked the Huskies hopes for an undefeated season.

  • Mellon Foundation awards grant to HUAM

    The Harvard University Art Museums (HUAM) has received a $705,000 grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation to fund two three-year postdoctoral fellowships in conservation science at the Straus Center for Conservation. The grant will enable scholars to pursue postdoctoral scientific research within an art museum setting. Fellows will draw upon the Straus Centers outstanding resources, including the Center for the Technical Study of Modern Art, and the collections of HUAM.

  • Four honored as College Professors

    Four faculty members have been named this years Harvard College Professors in recognition of their outstanding work as undergraduate teachers as well as for their exceptional achievements in graduate education and research.

  • The living streets of Havana

    Mario Coyula takes pride in his countrys ability to survive.

  • KSG takes close look at terrorism

    The link between terrorism and global poverty isnt as clear as many initially thought and may not exist at all, panelists said at a two-day conference (May 3-4) at the John F. Kennedy School of Government that sought real-world suggestions on how to cut terrorism off at the roots.

  • SPH takes aim at asthma

    An unusual collaboration of academic, government, and citizen organizations including the Harvard School of Public Health (SPH) is taking aim at the asthma epidemic raging in the United States by seeking solutions in Bostons public housing projects.

  • ‘Parachute radio’ comes to campus

    What the world needs now, according to former National Public Radio talk show host Christopher Lydon, is a really good chat.

  • Mitchell to address KSG graduates

    Former U.S. Sen. George Mitchell (D-Maine), nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize for his role in negotiating the Good Friday peace accord in Northern Ireland, has accepted an invitation from Kennedy School Dean Joseph S. Nye Jr. to address graduates of the Kennedy School on Wednesday, June 5. Mitchells speech will begin at 10 a.m. in the ARCO Forum.

  • Lunch on the go

    An adorable – well, not really – squirrel snacks on some garbage outside the Science Center. Despite a warm winter, Harvards squirrel population has grown accustomed to easy pickings.

  • Conference looks at aging in America

    As one of the largest population groups in history moves toward retirement, a Harvard colloquium has been organized to explore the ramifications of a phenomenon that will impact the economy, health care, politics, and culture in the United States and around the world. The Demographic Revolution: Prospects for a Maturing World will be held from 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m., May 18, at the Ames Courtroom at the Law School.

  • Zwick ’74 talks art, film, politics

    Dressed in a T-shirt, jeans, and sneakers, the youthful-looking Edward Zwick 74 was scarcely distinguishable from the Harvard undergraduates who came last Friday (May 3) to hear him speak.

  • HILR to sponsor concert

    To celebrate its 25th anniversary, the Harvard Institute for Learning in Retirement (HILR) – a membership organization offering courses in a variety of liberal arts subjects to former professionals and academics – is presenting a concert on May 18 in Sanders Theatre featuring internationally renowned violinist Joseph Lin. A 2000 Harvard graduate, Lin will be joined by pianist Benjamin Loeb 89, and cellist Sarah Carter, currently a sophomore at Harvard. The concert, which is open to the public, will benefit the Phillips Brooks House Association, a Harvard student-run public service organization with a dual mission of social service and social action.

  • 24 juniors are elected to Phi Beta Kappa

    Twenty-four juniors have been elected to Phi Beta Kappa, the nations oldest undergraduate honors organization. Their names, concentrations, and Houses follow:

  • Stride Rite rewards community service

    The Stride Rite Community Service Program hosted its 14th annual awards reception on Tuesday (May 7) in appreciation of undergraduates who are dedicated to community service. At this years reception – Public Service: A Lifetime Commitment – which included a public service panel and awards ceremony, four postgraduate fellowships and 10 senior recognition awards were given.

  • Talent stages a coup on campus

    Fair weather, fanfare, food, and a certain amount of foppery were just the trimmings in the feast of arts events and exhibitions that marked this years Arts First celebration. Starting off on a rather raw Thursday, the festival was, happily, greeted by warm and sunny weather for the following few days as talent staged a coup all across the University. From the classy co-ed a cappella of the Callbacks to the inspired improvisational comedy of On Thin Ice to Scandinavian fiddle music, this years offerings held the Harvard Square area enthralled. While classical music reverberated in the Fogg Art Museum Courtyard, Loker Commons was wailing the blues, and the Holden Chapel was filled with the spirit of Gilbert and Sullivan. As much variety could be found in the dance recitals, plays, films, readings, and exhibits livening up every corner of the campus. Arts First 2003 will have a tough act to follow!

  • Braunwald, Coller win Warren Alpert Prize

    Two scientists whose cardiovascular research has been credited with saving thousands of lives were honored on Wednesday (May 8) with the 14th annual Warren Alpert Foundation Scientific Prize at a ceremony at the Ritz Carlton Hotel.

  • Formal

    Staff photo by Justin Ide  Formal Young lovers take a break from dancing during their spring formal to enjoy the view from the Boston Bay Tower.

  • Samantha Power garners National Magazine Award

    Samantha Power, lecturer in public policy and outgoing executive director of the Kennedy Schools Carr Center for Human Rights Policy, has been bestowed the National Magazine Award by the American Society of Magazine Editors. The award honors Power and The Atlantic Monthly magazine for her article, Bystanders to Genocide, which appeared in the September issue of the magazine. The article explained the Clinton administrations response to the murder of 800,000 Rwandans in 1994.

  • History-making talk

    History was made on May 6 as His Excellency President Stjepan Mesic was the first Croatian president to deliver a public address at Harvard. Mesics subject was Southeast Europe: From War to Stability.

  • Surgery under the knife

    Between jolts from his pager and rings from his desk phone, Atul Gawande pulls up X-rays on his computer and confers with his officemate, a fellow resident, about how best to handle a patients internal laceration. They speak in a seemingly cryptic language run over with acronyms and words ending in -tosis and -itis. Its 8:30 p.m. on a Tuesday and patients need beds, tests, and treatments. In the fluorescent light of an office lined with textbooks as big as toaster ovens, there is little of the quietude and serenity that is characteristically associated with a writers life.

  • Harvard president visits People’s Republic of China

    Harvard President Lawrence H. Summers began a trip to the People’s Republic of China on May 10 and will visit the country through May 14. During his visit, Summers will deliver an address at Peking University, announce a joint Harvard/Development Research Center/Tsinghua University mid-career program, visit with various government and education officials, and speak with alumni who have gathered from all across Asia.

  • Errata

    An article that appeared on page 13 of the May 2 issue (Silbert, Farrell receive activist award at KSG), mistakenly reported the amount of the award as $10,000. The amount is $100,000, to be shared by the two recipients. The winners also received a commemorative sculpture designed by Maya Lin, the creator of the Vietnam War Memorial.

  • Newsmakers

    Courtney Bergman qualifies for 2002 NCAAs

  • The road to Himalayas starts at GSE

    Ashish Rajpals life journey has followed a meandering path. A native of India, he was launched on an international business career before a passion beckoned him to the Himalayas, then sent him to Harvard, where hes pursuing a masters in education at the Graduate School of Education (GSE) this year.

  • AMD Program accepting applications

    The Advanced Management Development (AMD) Program at the Harvard Design School is now accepting applications for its second class. The program is a long-term, high-level, international educational experience for successful real estate executives who want to expand their horizons and prepare to assume larger roles of leadership in their communities and in the industry.

  • Spot of tea might help heart patients

    Drinking tea on a regular basis may help protect patients with existing cardiovascular disease, according to a study in the May 7 issue of Circulation: Journal of the American Heart Association, which finds that tea consumption is associated with an increased rate of survival following a heart attack.

  • Summers donates books to four local schools

    Un libro te lleva al cualquier sitio que tu quieras: a book takes you wherever you want to go, 9-year-old Gabriel Castro told Harvard President Lawrence H. Summers on Friday (April 26).

  • Quark stars signal unstable universe

    Recent evidence for the existence of strange types of stars made from a new form of material raises some questions about the stability of matter in the universe.

  • Commencement notice

    Thursday, June 6, 2002

  • Erratum

    A photo that appeared on page 12 of the April 25 edition should have identified Alison Vaughan as the executive director of Tutoring Plus of Cambridge. She was incorrectly listed as a tutor. The Gazette regrets the error.