News+

  • News+

    Harvard Square Farmers Market’s catch of the day

    The Harvard Square Farmers Market is gearing up for another season. This year, the market will open at noon Tuesdays beginning June 14. Starting in March, the Cape Ann Fresh Catch (CAFC) Community Supported Fishery (CSF) will return to the corner of Kirkland and Oxford streets as part of the Harvard Square Farmers Market, using…

  • News+

    Argus Leader wins Nieman Foundation’s Taylor Family Award

    The Argus Leader in Sioux Falls has won the 2010 Taylor Family Award for Fairness in Newspapers with “Growing Up Indian,” an eight-part series that examines the daunting challenges faced by children on South Dakota’s Native American reservations. The Taylor Award is presented annually by the Nieman Foundation for Journalism at Harvard. Two finalists were…

  • News+

    At the midterm the system gets an “A”

    Last fall, a new special collections request system was introduced to Harvard College Library (HCL) with lofty goals and the promise of creating a better experience for both users and libraries.  With implementation complete in three of the six scheduled libraries, the word from both researchers and staff is “so far, so good.” Students in…

  • News+

    SEAS’s Debra Auguste wins prestigious NSF CAREER Award

    Debra Auguste, assistant professor of biomedical engineering at Harvard’s School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS), has won a Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER) Award from the National Science Foundation (NSF). The award honors Auguste as one of the most promising up-and-coming researchers in her field and provides an annual grant of $100,000 to support…

  • News+

    C. Conrad Wright, renowned scholar of American Unitarianism, dies

    C. Conrad Wright, Professor of American Church History Emeritus at Harvard Divinity School (HDS), died peacefully at home in his sleep on Feb. 17, 2011, at the age of 94. Wright was a prominent scholar of American Unitarianism, and he had a significant relationship with and effect on HDS during his 33-year career. Born on…

  • News+

    SEAS’s Shriram Ramanathan wins 2011 Robert Lansing Hardy Award

    Shriram Ramanathan has won the 2011 Robert Lansing Hardy Award on behalf of the The Minerals, Metals & Materials Society (TMS). The associate professor of materials science at the Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS) was noted for “innovative contributions to the synthesis, study and applications of thin film oxides.” The Robert Lansing…

  • News+

    HMNH appoints interim executive director, launches national search

    The Harvard Museum of Natural History (HMNH) today (Feb. 17) named as interim executive director David W. Ellis. Ellis is the former president of Lafayette College and the Museum of Science, Boston. He will temporarily replace Elisabeth Werby, who is slated to become chief of staff to the president of Northeastern University. The museum will…

  • News+

    Photo of centipede-bot from SEAS wins honorable mention

    A stunning photograph of a centipede-inspired robot (called a centipede millibot) developed by Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS) graduate student Katie Hoffman and faculty member Robert Wood was chosen as an Honorable Mention (tie) by Science and the National Science Foundation in the Photography category in the 2010 International Science & Engineering…

  • News+

    GSD Professor Van Valkenburgh wins Brendan Gill Prize

    The 23rd Brendan Gill Prize was awarded to Michael Van Valkenburgh, Charles Eliot Professor in Practice of Landscape Architecture, by the Municipal Art Society of New York. Recently opened to the public, Piers One and Six of the Brooklyn Bridge Park provide a variety of programming including a playground with a variety of swinging experiences…

  • News+

    Zimbabwe’s dramatic decline in HIV prevalence linked to partner reduction

    HIV prevalence in Zimbabwe declined by nearly half over the course of a decade (from 29 percent estimated adult prevalence in 1997 to 16 percent in 2007). HSPH’s Daniel Halperin and colleagues explored the causes of this remarkable success story in a paper published online in PLoS Medicine on February 8, 2011. The researchers found…

  • News+

    New findings suggest that young men also benefit from HPV vaccine

    New findings reported in The New England Journal of Medicine suggest that vaccinating young men against human papillomavirus (HPV), which cause the majority of cervical and anal cancers and a smaller proportion of other cancers, resulted in reduced infections and incidence of external genital lesions, primarily genital warts. In an editorial accompanying the article, published…

  • News+

    Biking on cycle tracks safer than cycling in the road

    A new study led by Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) researchers shows bicycle riders have fewer injuries when they ride on cycle tracks — physically separated bicycle-exclusive paths along roads — than in the road. The study, published online Feb. 9, 2011 in Injury Prevention, compares injury rates of cyclists on cycle tracks in…

  • News+

    Ankara as model for Cairo?

    A Harvard Kennedy School fellow argues that Turkey offers a promising model for Egypt as the dust begins to settle from the uprising that toppled President Hosni Mubarak, and the political players confront the challenges of shaping an Egyptian democracy. Joshua W. Walker, an International Security Program fellow in the Belfer Center for Science and…

  • News+

    HDS announces new assistant professor of science and religion

    Ahmed Ragab, physician, historian, and scholar of the medieval and modern Middle East, has been named the Richard T. Watson Assistant Professor of Science and Religion at Harvard Divinity School, effective July 1, 2011. Ragab was a visiting lecturer at Harvard Divinity School for the 2009 fall semester, and since 2008 he has been a…

  • News+

    Recreational math maven Vi Hart will ‘play’ at SEAS

    Join Vi Hart, self-proclaimed recreational mathematician, for an afternoon of fun on Feb. 18 from 3 to 4 p.m. in the lobby of the Maxwell Dworkin Building at the Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS). As for what kind of fun … “I’m certain we’ll think of something spectacular to do … but…

  • News+

    Innovation, collaboration key to inaugural projects in Library Lab

    The Harvard community has responded with insight and imagination to a call from the University’s Library Lab to collaborate with the Harvard Library and “to serve as co-creators of the information society of the future.” With generous support from the Arcadia Fund, Harvard’s Library Lab is designed to leverage the entrepreneurial aspirations of individuals across…

  • News+

    Harvard Thinks Big announces speakers

    Where can one hear the ideas of a Pulitzer Prize winner, a member of the Time 100, a world expert on Egypt’s current upheaval, and the authors of numerous best-selling books … all in one night? At the second annual Harvard Thinks Big event, taking place Feb. 17 at 8 p.m. at Sanders Theatre. The…

  • News+

    Tuned-up tool for music scholars

    For music scholars conducting research online, there is a dizzying array of resources that are literally at their fingertips. The challenge is in determining which to use. To help make sense of the flood of information, and assist scholars in identifying resources with the most extensive and academically-rigorous material, Loeb Music Library has revitalized an…

  • News+

    Sustainability opportunities for students available

    Harvard’s Office for Sustainability (OFS) is reaching out to students from a variety of backgrounds — everyone from visual artists to musicians to staunch environmental advocates — to involve them in a variety of sustainability initiatives this spring. The most recent projects include drawing cartoons on sustainable practices around campus and performing for this year’s…

  • News+

    Shorenstein Center announces winners and finalists for 2011 Goldsmith Prizes

    Three winners of the Goldsmith Book Prize and six finalists for the Goldsmith Prize for Investigative Reporting have been announced by the Joan Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics and Public Policy at Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government. The winner of the Goldsmith Prize for Investigative Reporting, which carries a cash award of $25,000, will be…

  • News+

    HKS scholars offer analysis on Egyptian turmoil

    The Egyptian political system is in turmoil, with demonstrators calling for change and the government of President Hosni Mubarak trying to maintain control. As events continue to unfold, Harvard Kennedy School faculty members and scholars are lending their varied perspectives on the situation. This page will be updated daily to provide readers with the latest…

  • News+

    HGSE announces spring 2011 Askwith Forums

    The Harvard Graduate School of Education (HGSE) is pleased to announce its Spring 2011 Askwith Forums, a series of public lectures dedicated to discussing challenges facing education, sharing new knowledge, and generating spirited conversation. Highlights this spring will include a talk by American Federation of Teachers President Randi Weingarten, a screening of the film “World…

  • News+

    Health reform news: Accountable care organizations offer promise for cost-savings, greater efficiency

    Accountable care organizations (ACOs), legal partnerships between doctors and hospitals that provide financial incentives to providers for more efficient and better care, will be part of Medicare by 2012 and are attracting wider interest among commercial payers and state legislatures. According to a Jan. 27 article in the New York Times, ACOs receive a lump…

  • News+

    HSPH scholars discuss proposed Harvard Pilgrim Health Care and Tufts Health Plan merger

    Harvard Pilgrim Health Care and Tufts Health Plan, Massachusetts’ second and third largest health plans, are exploring a merger that would help them to compete against market leader Blue Cross Blue Shield, it was announced on Jan. 25. Harvard School of Public Health health policy experts, including Nancy Turnbull and Meredith Rosenthal, weighed in on…

  • News+

    Applied knowledge opens doors for young SEAS alumni

    Undergraduates were treated to a lively discussion of life beyond Harvard this week. Five young SEAS alumni returned to campus on Jan. 31 to participate in the first of a series of engineering-themed career events hosted this spring by the FAS Office of Career Services. These recent graduates have found that their degrees open doors…

  • News+

    Students celebrated Chinese New Year at all-Ivy gala in Sanders

    The Harvard Chinese Students and Scholars Association (HCSSA) presented an all-Ivy League evening gala to a capacity audience at Sanders Theatre on Jan. 29 to celebrate the upcoming Chinese New Year – the year of the rabbit – which comes on Feb.3. The gala, under the theme “Bond,” gathered performers from all eight Ivy League…

  • News+

    Center for European Studies welcomes its spring fellows

    The Minda de Gunzburg Center for European Studies is pleased to announce the arrival of its 2011 spring fellows. The center is dedicated to fostering the study of European history, politics, and society at Harvard. The center was founded as a catalyst to bring scholars and students together to talk and think about Europe. As…

  • News+

    Webcast: Call for action to address chronic disease in developing countries

    HSPH Dean Julio Frenk spoke on a panel about the rising burden of chronic disease in the developing world at the World Economic Forum Annual Meeting in Davos, Switzerland on Jan. 27. The panel called for international cooperation to address the 35 million deaths worldwide that occur each year from chronic disease. “Chronic disease causes…

  • News+

    Secondhand smoke laws may reduce childhood ear infections

    Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) researchers and colleagues from the Research Institute for a Tobacco Free Society, Republic of Ireland, have found that a reduction in secondhand smoking in American homes was associated with fewer cases of otitis media, the scientific name for middle ear infection. The study appears on Jan. 26, 2011, as…

  • News+

    Event to honor life, legacy of Martin Luther King Jr.

    Since 1975, Harvard University has hosted an annual celebration of the life and legacy of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.  The theme of this year’s service, to be held on Feb. 7 from 7 to 8 p.m. at the Memorial Church, is “Social Transformation through Compassion.”  The event is free and open to…