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Rock Center names entrepreneurs-in-residence
As usual, M.B.A. students attending Harvard Business School (HBS) this year who are interested in entrepreneurship or looking to create and even launch a startup of their own will be able to take advantage of plenty of resources on the HBS campus, including more than 30 faculty members and this year’s cohort of 21 Entrepreneurs-in-Residence at the…

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Innovation Labs announce startup accelerator ventures
The Harvard Innovation Labs, an ecosystem that supports Harvard students and select alumni in exploring innovation and entrepreneurship, today announced that it has selected 13 ventures to participate in the inaugural Launch Lab X accelerator program. More than 260 ventures from 36 countries applied to Launch Lab X. The cohort is comprised of startups from…

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Tara Pacific Expedition wraps up in Boston
Schooner finishes its research mission, offers onboard visits, and partners with Radcliffe Institute for science lecture After more than two years at sea, the research schooner Tara docked in Boston for a weeklong visit. During the Tara Pacific Expedition, which began in May 2016, the vessel has traveled more than 62,000 miles, studying 40 archipelagos…

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Enduring Harvard tradition adjusts to new class schedule
Morning Prayers will start 15 minutes early on Oct. 1, marking the beginning of a new schedule for a piece of enduring Harvard tradition that takes place in Memorial Church’s Appleton Chapel before classes each day. The short service of choral music, Psalm readings, prayers, and daily guest homily will now be held from 8:30…

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Faculty Council meeting — Sept. 26, 2018
On Sept. 26 the Faculty Council nominated a Parliamentarian for the 2018–19 academic year and approved proposed changes to the language requirement. They also approved the convening of a committee to develop a proposal for early registration and previewed the Dean’s Annual Report to the Faculty. Finally, they met with Provost Alan Garber to ask…
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Applications open for Climate Solutions Living Lab
Applications are now being accepted for the Spring 2019 the Climate Solutions Living Lab course and are due no later than Oct. 15. The highly interactive, multi-disciplinary course brings together graduate students from across Harvard to study and design practical solutions for reducing greenhouse gas emissions at Harvard, in neighboring communities, elsewhere in United States, and…

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Small modulator for big data
Conventional lithium niobite modulators, the longtime workhorse of the optoelectronic industry, may soon go the way of the vacuum tube and floppy disc. Researchers from the Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences have developed a new method to fabricate and design integrated, on-chip modulators 100 times smaller and 20 times more efficient than…

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Strengthening public health connections between Thailand, U.S.
A range of issues relevant to health in both Thailand and the U.S. — including medical education, maternal health, hypertension and stroke risk, and the role of policy and persuasion in changing health behaviors — were discussed at a recent symposium aimed at promoting connections between the two countries in public health and medicine. The…

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Hotamışlıgil wins diabetes research award
The 2018 EASD–Novo Nordisk Foundation Diabetes Prize for Excellence has been awarded to Gökhan Hotamışlıgil, J.S. Simmons Professor of Genetics and Metabolism and chair of the Department of Genetics and Complex Diseases at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. The award is given annually to an internationally recognized researcher who has contributed significantly to…

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2018 HAA Award recipients announced
The Harvard Alumni Association (HAA) Awards were established in 1990 to recognize outstanding service to Harvard University through alumni activities. This year’s awards ceremony will take place on Thursday, Sept. 27, during the fall meeting of the HAA Board of Directors. Danguole Spakevicius Altman ’81 of Houston is deeply engaged with Harvard both at home…

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Agarwal named Yidan Prize laureate
Anant Agarwal, founder and CEO of edX, the massive open online course (MOOC) provider supported by Harvard and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), has been granted the Yidan Prize for Education Development for increasing global access to education with the open-source online platform. Founded in 2016 by Tencent co-founder Charles Chen Yidan, the Yidan…

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Faculty Council meeting — Sept. 12, 2018
On Sept. 12 the Faculty Council welcomed new members, reviewed history and policies, and chose subcommittees for 2018–19. They also discussed a proposal for early registration and proposed changes to the language requirement. The Council next meets on Sept. 26. The preliminary deadline for the Oct. 2 meeting of the Faculty is Sept. 18 at…
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‘RESILIENT’ showcases Bostonians’ opioid recovery
The opioid crisis is being felt acutely in Massachusetts, with nearly 40 individuals dying every week from an opioid overdose. Amidst the epidemic, a new project led by two Harvard Medical School (HMS) students aims to highlight a different story arc. “RESILIENT: Narratives of Hope from Boston’s Opioid Crisis” is a curated collection of interviews…

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Amabile receives lifetime achievement award
Teresa Amabile, a Baker Foundation Professor at Harvard Business School and the Edsel Bryant Ford Professor of Business Administration Emerita, has been selected by the Organizational Behavior (OB) Division of the Academy of Management as the 2018 winner of its Lifetime Achievement Award. Established in 2005, the award recognizes senior scholars who have made exceptional…

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Business School announces Goldsmith Fellows
Harvard Business School (HBS) has announced the 2018 recipients of its Horace W. Goldsmith Fellowships. Established in 1998 by the Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation and Richard L. Menschel, M.B.A. ’59, a former director of the Foundation and a limited partner at Goldman Sachs, to encourage students from the nonprofit sector to attend HBS, these fellowships…

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U.S. gun suicide rate second-highest worldwide
More than 250,000 gun-related deaths occurred in 2016, and half of them happened in just six nations: Brazil, the United States, Mexico, Venezuela, Colombia, and Guatemala, according to a new study in JAMA. The U.S. ranked 30th in gun homicides, but had the second-highest rate of gun suicides. David Hemenway, professor of health policy at Harvard…

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Rising CO2 levels putting millions at risk of nutritional deficiencies
Rising levels of carbon dioxide (CO2) from human activity are making staple crops such as rice and wheat less nutritious and could result in 175 million people becoming zinc deficient and 122 million people becoming protein deficient by 2050, according to new research led by Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. The study also…

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Radical changes will be needed for worldwide universal health care
Technological innovation, expansion of the use of frontline personnel such as community health workers, and rapid increases in health care financing are likely to be instrumental to achieving universal health care (UHC) in countries around the world, according to a new analysis led by Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. While the idea of…

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Graduate Commons faculty directors work to make Harvard Housing feel like home
For hundreds of Harvard affiliates and their families living in Harvard University Housing, it’s the sense of belonging and community connection that makes all the difference. Eight faculty directors with Harvard Graduate Commons Program (GCP) work every day to help make that possible. These intellectual leaders, together with GCP staff and community advisors, host social and academic events…

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400 to participate in First-Year Day of Service
On Saturday, Sept. 8, more than 400 members of Harvard’s Class of 2022, along with faculty, staff, and upper-level student team leaders, will paint and spruce up local classrooms, clean up parks, beautify open spaces, and plant flowers in partnership with nonprofits and schools in their new community. Started four years ago, the First-Year Day…

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Chef Martin Breslin wins Eating on the Wild Side Challenge
Congratulations to Chef Martin Breslin, director of culinary operations at Harvard University, who created the overall winning dish at the 2018 Eating on the Wild Side Chef Challenge which took place in Portland, Maine on Aug. 1. The challenge was held on the final day of a three-day wild foods immersion program hosted by the Wild…

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Boxers or briefs? Prospective dads have an easy choice
Men who most frequently wore boxers had significantly higher sperm concentrations and total sperm counts when compared with men who did not usually wear boxers, according to new research led by Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. The findings of this study, conducted in the Fertility Clinic at Massachusetts General Hospital, suggest that certain…

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Massachusetts HHS secretary visits Harvard’s Family Van
The Family Van, a mobile health clinic affiliated with Harvard Medical School, recently welcomed Massachusetts Secretary of Health and Human Services Marylou Sudders during its weekly visit to Codman Square in the Dorchester neighborhood of Boston. Founded nearly three decades ago, the Family Van offers free health screenings, such as blood pressure, diabetes, HIV, pregnancy…

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Driving mega profit return through data entrepreneurship
After Chunlei Tang published “The Data Industry: The Business and Economics of Information and Big Data” in 2016, she focused her time on a problem surrounding data innovation within the healthcare industry. Data-rich profits can come from a number of sources — personal, private, or third-party — but each stakeholder may not share equitably in…

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Inspiring a new generation of coders
A three-hour session on coding during summer break might not initially sound appealing to an elementary school crowd, but throw some robots into the mix and these local students could not have been happier. Entering the class, one is bombarded by the beeping, drawing and lighting up of robots on the move. The kids, each…

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MetaLAB unveils Curricle
About three years ago, metaLAB at Harvard took up the challenge to develop a digital tool that would revolutionize how students, faculty, and administrators engage with the Harvard curriculum. On Thursday, Aug. 2, 2018, in front of a small audience of deans, faculty, and members of Harvard Initiative for Teaching and Learning (HILT), the LAB…

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Disaster planning means saving lives
There are a lot of scary threats in the world — extreme weather, terrorist attacks, deadly infectious diseases, mass shootings — but if health care organizations plan ahead for such disasters, lives can be saved. That was the key message from emergency preparedness expert Paul Biddinger, who spoke to a Harvard T.H. Chan School of…

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Applications open for 2019 Australia-Harvard Fellowships
Australia-Harvard Fellowships are offered by the Harvard Club of Australia Foundation supporting learned exchange between Harvard University and Australia. These Fellowships are aimed at creative scientists normally based at Harvard who have a persuasive plan for collaborative work in Australia with Australia’s best bioscience researchers and educators. The award also supports Australian researchers who wish…

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Ash Center introduces Technology and Democracy Fellows
The Ash Center for Democratic Governance and Innovation at Harvard Kennedy School is pleased to announce its newest cohort of Technology and Democracy Fellows — six technology and digital leaders from around the country committed to improving the health of American democracy. This year’s fellows have demonstrated a deep passion for using technology to strengthen our democracy…

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From the Ed Portal to Dana-Farber
When he arrived in Allston from Honduras a decade ago, Allston resident Jose Mendoza’s parents wasted no time in signing him up to take part in the mentoring program at the Harvard Ed Portal. In the beginning, the then 10-year-old came twice a week to learn about everything from life sciences to mathematics. He continued…
