Campus & Community

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  • Seasoned mayors give advice to new ones

    Faced with greater responsibilities in the aftermath of Sept. 11, four mayors from big cities around the country spoke in the ARCO Forum about local leadership during times of global crisis. The event was part of a three-day training program (beginning Nov. 14) for new mayors that has taken place every other year at the Kennedy School since 1973. It is co-sponsored by the U.S. Conference of Mayors and the Institute of Politics.

  • Ballroom Team shows national flair

    Twelve members of the student-run Harvard Ballroom Dance Team made an impressive showing at the National Collegiate Dancesport Championships held over the weekend of Nov. 17-18 in Columbus, Ohio. With more than 40 U.S. colleges participating, the Harvard team placed second in both the American and International Style team match events.

  • Tough bounce

    Harvards game plan of clinching the Ivy League soccer title for the first time in 5 years went afoul as a result of a 3-0 shutout by Brown (7-7-2, 5-1-1 Ivy) on Saturday, Nov. 17, at Ohiri Field. Harvards lone goal of the game was negated following a hand ball penalty. With the win, the Bears secured a share of the Ivy Championship along with Princeton, while ending Harvards campaign at 10-4-1 overall, and 5-2 in the Ivies – a considerable leap, nevertheless, from last seasons last place Ivy showing.

  • Study: Taking heart leads to better heart health

    Researchers at the School of Public Health (SPH) and the Department of Veterans Affairs have linked a more optimistic outlook in older men with a dramatically reduced risk of coronary heart disease (CHD). The study examined the effects of an optimistic versus pessimistic way of explaining events on the incidence of heart attack, angina, and fatal CHD among older men.

  • Atmosphere detected on a distant world

    Astronomers have made the first direct detection of the atmosphere of a planet orbiting a star outside our solar system and have obtained the first information about its chemical composition. Their unique observations demonstrate that it is possible to measure the chemical makeup of extrasolar planet atmospheres and potentially to search for chemical markers of life beyond Earth.

  • Clinton hails globalization’s gains

    The fight against terrorism is a battle to determine the course of the next century, former U.S. President William Jefferson Clinton told a crowd of about 5,600 in Harvard Universitys Albert H. Gordon Track and Tennis Center Monday, Nov. 19.

  • Crash course helps students keep Clinton event rolling

    The sound check went on, sounding like a monastic chant as it echoed off Gordon Track and Tennis Centers high metal ceiling. Ignoring the droned 1, 2, 3, 4s, 24 Harvard undergraduates rested on newly-erected risers Sunday (Nov. 18) as they gobbled pizza and prepared for the next phase of the operation.

  • ARCO Forum scene of frank exchange

    The role of the United States on the world stage remained the top concern of students who met with former President William Jefferson Clinton at the ARCO Forum immediately following his address at the Gordon Track and Tennis Center Monday afternoon (Nov. 19). The question-and-answer session was open to approximately 400 students, faculty, and staff from the Kennedy School of Government and undergraduate students who are active in the Institute of Politics, which hosted Clintons visit to Harvard.

  • Next year will see boost in graduate funding

    After several months of close study, Jeremy R. Knowles, the dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences (FAS), has decided to provide an additional $4 million in graduate student scholarships and fellowships, beginning in the next academic year.

  • A totem of appreciation

    Nathan Jackson, a Tlingit carver from Ketchikan, Alaska, performs a ceremonial dance Nov. 19 during the installation of a totem pole he created especially for the Peabody Museum. Last May, as mandated by the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA), the museum returned a Tlingit totem pole which had been acquired 100 years before. In appreciation, the poles owners, the Teikweidi clan, gave the museum a large red cedar, and the Peabody commissioned Jackson to carve a new pole from the tree.

  • Letters, drawings, make ‘Windshield’ clear

    Museums by definition preserve and display the past, but the new exhibition at the Sackler goes beyond the mere presentation of venerable objects.

  • Beyond Phineas Gage

    Skeletons of conjoined twins and legs corkscrewed with rickets. Kidney stones the size of golf balls. The skull of a man who survived a crowbar shot through his head.

  • Football takes home all the marbles

    With the hoisting of the Ivy cup, the Harvard football teams dream season suddenly became very real on Saturday, Nov. 17. In beating rival Yale, 35-23, in the 118th playing of the Game, the Crimson won its 10th Ivy League Championship and fourth outright crown, while extending its perfect season to 9-0. Not since 1913 has Harvard waged an unbeaten, untied campaign.

  • A Harvard football timeline

    Sept. 22 Harvard 27, Brown 20 In the season opener, the Crimson unveiled a new weapon in tailback convert Josh Staph ’02. Down 17-7, the former fullback scored two of…

  • Wilfred Cantwell Smith

  • KSG’s Belfer Center announces a variety of fellowships for 2001-02

    The Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs (BCSIA) is the hub of the Kennedy School of Governments (KSGs) research, teaching, and training in international security affairs, environmental and resource issues, science and technology policy, and conflict studies.

  • Minority bone marrow registration drive is set

    The Harvard Cancer Society and the Asian American Brotherhood are working with the National Marrow Donor Program to recruit minorities for the National Marrow Donor Registry. Each year more than 30,000 children and adults in the United States are diagnosed with life-threatening blood diseases such as leukemia. For many of these patients, a marrow or stem cell transplant is their only chance for survival. Yet such procedures are only possible when patients find donors with matching tissue types.

  • To clone or leave alone?

    The head of the Worcester biotech company that claims to have cloned the first human embryo ‘searched his soul’ before embarking on the research, he said during a lively discussion on the ethics of cloning and stem cell research Monday (Dec. 3) at Harvard Medical School (HMS).

  • Talking stories

    SPECIAL TO THE GAZETTE 12/3/01 They are the hard-boiled scribes, the muckrakers, the first on the scene, the late-night newsroom hounds who put a humanistic spin on the tragic. In…

  • This month in Harvard History

    n Nov. 1, 1924 – The Harvard-Boston (Egyptian) Expedition begins excavation of the royal cemetery of King Cheops (Khufu) near the Great Pyramid and soon identifies the tombs of Prince Kawaab (Cheopss eldest son), four other princes, Princess Meresankh II, and two pyramid priests.

  • Presidential moment

    German President Johannes Rau (right) shakes hands with Harvard President Lawrence H. Summers during a visit by the German leader Nov. 15. Rau met with Summers after touring Harvard Yard with University Marshal Rick Hunt. Rau also visited the Minda de Gunzburg Center for European Studies, where he presented Abigail Collins, the centers associate director, with a medal in recognition of her commitment to German-American academic exchanges.

  • Radcliffe hosts computer expert

    Susan L. Graham, a computer science professor at the University of California, Berkeley, will speak on Improving Software Productivity today (Nov. 29) at 4 p.m., as part of the Deans Lecture Series at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study. The talk will be held in the Robert and Naida Lessin Forum in the Maxwell Dworkin Building, 33 Oxford St., Cambridge. The event is free and open to the public.

  • Comprehensive set of vision genes discovered

    Harvard Medical School (HMS) researchers have discovered nearly all the genes responsible for vision, which could help in diagnosing and treating blinding diseases. Macular degeneration alone affects 25 percent of people over age 75. The discovery in mice of the full set of photoreceptor genes expressed in the retinal cells could also lead to new methods for preserving and restoring the vision of those affected.

  • Clinton shares candid views on foreign policy, globalization at ARCO Forum

    The role of the United States on the world stage remained the top concern of students who met with President Clinton at the ARCO Forum immediately following his address at the Gordon Track & Tennis Center Monday afternoon.

  • Clinton hails globalization’s gains

    Former U.S. President William Jefferson Clinton spoke of the interaction among religion, public service, and globalization on Monday (Nov. 19) to a crowd of more than 5,600 in Harvard University’s Albert H. Gordon Track and Tennis Center.

  • Crash course helps students keep Clinton event rolling

    The sound check went on, sounding like a monastic chant as it echoed off Gordon Track and Tennis Center’s high metal ceiling. Ignoring the droned 1, 2, 3, 4’s, 24 Harvard undergraduates rested on newly-erected risers Sunday (Nov. 18) as they gobbled pizza and prepared for the next phase of the operation.

  • Seasoned mayors give advice to new mayors

    Faced with greater responsibilities in the aftermath of Sept. 11, four mayors from big cities around the country spoke in the ARCO Forum about local leadership during times of global crisis . The event was part of a three-day training program (beginning Nov. 14) for new mayors that has taken place every other year at the Kennedy School since 1973. It is co-sponsored by the U.S. Conference of Mayors and the Institute of Politics.

  • Nathan Pusey dies at 94

    Nathan Marsh Pusey, the 24th president of Harvard, died early on the morning of Nov. 14 at the New York Weill Cornell Medical Center in New York City. He was 94.