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Business School announces Class Day speaker
Doug McMillon, president and chief executive officer of Walmart Inc., will be Harvard Business School’s (HBS) Class Day Distinguished Speaker on Thursday, May 27, 2021, the School announced this week. The ceremony, which will be presented virtually on the same day as the broader Harvard University commencement and the conferring of HBS diplomas, will also…

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Hypertension during pregnancy associated with heightened risk of early death
Women who experienced high blood pressure during pregnancy had a higher risk of dying prematurely from heart disease, according to a new study led by Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. The study, led by Jorge Chavarro, associate professor of nutrition and epidemiology, analyzed data on more than 88,000 women who participated in the…

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Faculty Council meeting — March 10, 2021
On March 10 the Faculty Council engaged in discussion with the chairs of the University’s Non-Discrimination Policy Working Group, Anti-Bullying Policy Working Group, and Title IX and Other Sexual Misconduct Policy Working Group. The Council next meets on March 24. The preliminary deadline for the April 6 meeting of the Faculty is March 16 at…
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Harvard Library ends use of subject heading ‘illegal alien’
Harvard Library, like all academic libraries in the U.S., typically takes its cataloging language cues from the Library of Congress. But it has now made one major exception — the phrase “illegal alien.” That subject heading disappeared permanently from Harvard’s collection descriptions in January, thanks to work by Change the Subject Task Force, a group…

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Voting rights battle enters a new round
On March 1, the Georgia House of Representatives passed H.B.531, a sweeping elections bill that critics and voting rights advocates were quick to note increases restrictions on absentee voting and curtails weekend early voting hours. Just two days later, the U.S. House of Representatives passed H.R.1, legislation containing a broad range of democratic reforms, from…

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Catherine Dulac receives Nomis Distinguished Scientist and Scholar Award
Each year, the international NOMIS Foundation selects two notable academics as recipients of the NOMIS Distinguished Scientist and Scholar Award, and this year Harvard professor Catherine Dulac is one of the honorees. “This is terrific news, and more well-deserved recognition for the exciting and groundbreaking work that Catherine and her lab have been doing,” said Sean Eddy, Ellmore…

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Harvard Business School announces Spring 2021 cohort of executive fellows
Harvard Business School (HBS) has announced the spring cohort of Executive Fellows for the 2020-21 academic year. The Executive Fellows Program leverages the expertise of outstanding practitioners, including alumni, each of whom partners with an HBS faculty member to bring their experience in business into the MBA program and the School. The fellows contribute to…

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New paper examines roles of financial fragility and control in well-being
Researchers Piotr Bialowolski, Dorota Weziak-Bialowolska, and Eileen McNeely, of the Harvard Chan SHINE program, examine the roles that financial control and financial fragility play in well-being in a new paper published in the journal Social Indicators Research. Financial fragility is recognized as a substantial issue for individual well-being. Various estimates show that between 46 and…

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Business School’s Baker Library announces new collection
Harvard Business School (HBS) and Odgers Berndtson, a world leader in recruiting and developing organizational leaders, today jointly announced a new collection for the school’s Baker Library, made up of interviews with the colleagues and family of former Genzyme Corporation Chairman, Chief Executive Officer, and President Henri A. Termeer, one of biotech’s early pioneers. The…

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Pierre E. Jacob awarded Guy Medal from Royal Statistical Society
Harvard professor Pierre E. Jacob was awarded this year’s Guy Medal in Bronze by the Royal Statistical Society. The prize is presented by the Royal Statistical Society and is named after William Augustus Guy, the British medical statistician. The prize is awarded to honor excellent work presented to any conference or meeting run by the…

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Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine works well outside of clinical trials, study finds
Pfizer and BioNTech’s COVID-19 vaccine is proving as effective in real-world settings as it did in clinical testing, according to a study in the New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM) co-authored by Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health researchers. The study looked at data on more than 500,000 people who received the vaccine in…

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Psychological health linked to heart health
Mental health and well-being appear to be connected to biological processes and behaviors that contribute to cardiovascular disease (CVD), according to an American Heart Association statement published in Circulation on Jan. 25, 2021. The statement, co-authored by Laura Kubzansky, Lee Kum Kee Professor of Social and Behavioral Sciences at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public…

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Faculty Council meeting — Feb. 24, 2021
On Feb. 24 the Faculty Council engaged in discussion with members of the University’s Committee to Articulate the Principles on Renaming. The Council next meets on March 10. The next meeting of the Faculty is on March 2. The preliminary deadline for the April 6 meeting of the Faculty is March 16 at noon.
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Power and justice in the lone grid state: Graduate School of Design weighs in
Newspapers this week are swamped with headlines like, “What Went Wrong with the Texas Power Grid?” To anyone not intimately concerned with the details of American electricity distribution, this may seem like an odd way of referring to the current electricity crisis in Texas. Isn’t there one national grid? Actually, there are three: the Eastern Interconnection, the…

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Senior named Gates Cambridge Scholar
Meena Venkataramanan ’21 is one of 24 U.S. citizens who make up the Gates Cambridge Scholars class of 2021. She will join the MPhil program in English Studies at the University of Cambridge in October, and plans to study contemporary refugee and asylum-seeker literature from the U.S. and the United Kingdom. Venkataramanan is a joint…

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Firefighters’ protective clothing may contain toxic chemicals
The clothing that firefighters wear to protect themselves from fire and other hazards may contain toxic compounds called perfluoroalkyl substances, or PFASs, according to a new study led by Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. In the study, led by Anna Young, a research fellow in the Department of Environmental Health at Harvard T.H.…

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Katharine Park awarded Dan David Prize
The Dan David Prize announced on Monday seven recipients of the award for 2021, including the Samuel Zemurray Jr. and Doris Zemurray Stone Radcliffe Professor Emerita of the History of Science Katharine “Katy” Park. This year’s recipients also feature director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases Anthony Fauci and fellow distinguished health and medical scholars…

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Machine learning sheds new light on how walnuts benefit health
A newly developed machine learning algorithm has uncovered information about how eating walnuts can lead to significantly lower risk of chronic diseases. The algorithm was able to analyze data from 1,833 participants of a multi-year nutrition study and identify 19 biomarkers associated with walnut consumption, according to research led by Harvard T.H. Chan School of…

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Harvard recognized as one of the best workplaces for commuters
Harvard is being recognized as one of the top Universities for commuters in the country. Harvard’s CommuterChoice program recently received a 2021 Best Workplace for Commuters award based on the level of commuter-benefits provided to our community members. Those benefits include Harvard’s 50 percent subsidy on transit passes, discounted memberships for Bluebikes bike sharing, carpool…

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New insights on how chromatin scanning generates diverse antibody repertoires
Researchers in the laboratory of Frederick Alt of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute and Program in Cellular and Molecular Medicine (PCMM) at Children’s Hospital Boston made a groundbreaking discovery at the nexus of chromatin biology and immunology. Their work, recently published in Nature, showed that physiological deregulation of the WAPL chromatin-maintenance factor allows developing B…

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Will the pandemic change higher education for good?
The challenges that the field of education has faced this year have been well-documented, from the swift and surprising shift to online learning in spring 2020 to the transition into a more robust and sustainable model of remote teaching and learning this fall and winter. In the realm of higher education, as in other areas,…

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Three Harvard members elected to National Academy of Engineering
The National Academy of Engineering (NAE) has elected 106 new members and 23 international members, announced NAE President John L. Anderson this week. This brings the total U.S. membership to 2,355 and the number of international members to 298. Three members of the Harvard community were included in the most recent election: Doyle, Francis J.,…

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Faculty Council meeting — Feb. 10, 2021
On Feb. 10 the Faculty Council approved a proposal to establish a Ph.D. program in Quantum Science and Engineering and heard an update on the work of the Task Force on Visual Culture and Signage. They also heard a presentation on a reorganization of the “Handbook for Students.” The Council next meets on Feb. 24.…
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The lasting impact of ethnic studies
As she prepared to lead classmates, professors, teaching fellows (TFs), and visitors in a virtual Zumba session, Bri Braswell paused for a moment of gratitude. “It has been a gift, a breath of air, for me to be here,” said Braswell, a master’s student in the Higher Education Program, looking out across a sea of…

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Sophomore Convocation offers a glimpse of the future of Harvard engineering
The fifth annual Sophomore Convocation offered new concentrators of the Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS) a sense of unity in the midst of a virtual world. Held via Zoom, the program featured words of advice and encouragement for sophomores from a group of diverse and distinguished alumni, and concluded…

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Innovation Labs announce Spring Venture Program cohort
The Harvard Innovation Labs recently announced that more than 420 ventures are joining the 2021 Spring Venture Program. “Last spring, soon after welcoming hundreds of students to the Harvard Innovation Labs at our in-person Venture Program orientation, we transitioned to entirely virtual programming,” said Matt Segneri, Bruce and Bridgitt Evans Executive Director of the Harvard…

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Harvard’s metalens technology enters commercial development
A startup company founded by applied physicists at the Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS) intends to transform consumer electronics by introducing a powerful technology for imaging and illumination that could replace conventional lenses with an ultrathin, flat optical microchip. Harvard’s Office of Technology Development (OTD), which cultivates the University’s…

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Postdoctoral fellow receives National Institute of General Medical Sciences award
The National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS) has announced its initial awards to scholars as part of the Maximizing Opportunities for Scientific and Academic Independent Careers (MOSAIC) K99/R00 program. Elias Picazo, a postdoctoral fellow in chemistry and chemical biology with the Mallinckrodt Chemistry Lab, has received an award for his project titled “Strategic Molecular…

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Faculty Council meeting — Jan. 27, 2021
On Jan. 27 the Faculty Council heard a proposal to establish a Ph.D. program in Quantum Science and Engineering. The Council next meets on Feb. 10. The next meeting of the Faculty is on Feb. 2. The preliminary deadline for the March 2 meeting of the Faculty is Feb. 16 at noon.
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Harvard Chan School experts tapped for Biden administration posts
Two faculty members from Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health — Sara Bleich and Benjamin Sommers — and one former faculty member, Gina McCarthy, have been chosen for roles in the new Biden-Harris administration. The appointments for Bleich and Sommers were announced Jan. 20, shortly after the inauguration of President Joe Biden. McCarthy’s appointment…
