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  • Campus & Community

    RMO workshops to cover electronic record keeping

    To help Harvard staff improve the organization of their files, the Universitys Records Management Office (RMO) is offering workshops on electronic record keeping. These workshops provide practical guidance on filing systems, filing rules and procedures, and equipment and supplies. This year, a new section will cover such issues as version control and naming conventions, and…

  • Campus & Community

    Andrews, HBS professor, Twain scholar, 89

    Kenneth R. Andrews, who began his academic career as an authority on Mark Twain and went on to become a renowned professor at Harvard Business School (HBS), a founder of the field of corporate strategy, editor of the Harvard Business Review, and a beloved master of Leverett House, died on Sept. 4 at his home…

  • Campus & Community

    Ruggie named UN special representative

    Evron and Jeane Kirkpatrick Professor of International Affairs John Ruggie was appointed as UN Secretary-General Kofi Annans special representative on the issue of human rights and transnational corporations and other business enterprises this past month. Ruggie served as UN assistant secretary-general and adviser to Annan on strategic planning from 1997 to 2001.

  • Campus & Community

    Seeking a successor

    A stubborn Harvard football team made do without its marquee player from last season – Ivy League Player of the Year Ryan Fitzpatrick 05 – to earn a come-from-behind win in their season opener opposite host Holy Cross this past Saturday afternoon (Sept. 17). The 31-21 victory extended the Crimsons winning ways to a dozen…

  • Campus & Community

    Divine progress

    Harvard Divinity School (HDS) held its convocation Sept. 20, marking the 50th anniversary of the Schools admission of women.

  • Campus & Community

    Newsmakers

    Meselson named NYAS honorary life member Thomas Dudley Cabot Professor of the Natural Sciences Matthew Meselson was recently named an honorary life member of the New York Academy of Sciences (NYAS). Honorary life membership is a distinction conferred on a very limited number of scientists who have made, according to the academy, “outstanding contributions to…

  • Campus & Community

    The Big Picture

    Harvard Police Officer Jack OKane got his first tattoo on a visit to Ireland from a guy named Danny Bullman, someone he says hell never forget.

  • Campus & Community

    Japan scholar Donald Shively dies

    Donald Howard Shively, an authority on Japanese urban life and popular culture in the Tokugawa period and chair of the Department of East Asian Languages and Civilizations at Harvard, where he also served as director of the Japan Institute (now the Reischauer Institute of Japanese Studies), died on Aug. 13 in a nursing facility near…

  • Campus & Community

    Lukin illuminates quantum science

    Mikhail Lukin thinks that devices based on quantum science are at the same stage as radios were about 100 years ago. To catch up, the recently tenured professor of physics is stopping and storing light, making artificial atoms behave in new ways, and doing engineering with superconductivity. When quantum does overtake kilowatts, you can expect…

  • Campus & Community

    Bhabha joins Radcliffe as senior adviser in humanities

    Homi K. Bhabha, the Anne F. Rothenberg Professor of English and American Literature and Languages in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences (FAS), director of the Humanities Center at Harvard, 2004 – 05 Radcliffe Institute fellow, and faculty associate at the institute for the past three years, is now also affiliated with the Radcliffe Institute…

  • Campus & Community

    Police reports

    Following are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department for the week ending Sept. 19. The official log is located at 1033 Massachusetts Ave., sixth floor, and is available online at http://www.hupd.harvard.edu/.

  • Campus & Community

    ‘Movie Time’ rolls out double feature in the Yard

    The fourth annual Movie Time at Harvard – a free, outdoor film screening presented by President Lawrence H. Summers – will be held Sunday (Sept. 25) at 7:15 p.m. in Tercentenary Theatre (between Memorial Church and Widener Library). This years event will be a double feature. Movie Time is open to the entire University community…

  • Campus & Community

    This month in Harvard history

    September 1902 – More than 600 undergraduates arrive in the Class of 1906. Until just before World War I, entering Classes stabilize around this size. September 1906 – The Medical School dedicates its newly built Longwood Ave. quarters, designed by architect Charles A. Coolidge, Class of 1881. At the time, the new facilities constitute the…

  • Campus & Community

    Fundraising reaches $590M in fiscal year ’05

    Fundraising receipts for the University totaled $590 million in fiscal year 2005, a $50 million increase over fiscal year 2004, Vice President for Alumni Affairs and Development Donella M. Rapier announced today (Sept. 22).

  • Campus & Community

    Step right up to first state fair

    Tercentenary Theatre will take on the look and feel of a state fair this Friday evening (Sept. 23) as students get the chance to ride a mechanical bull, dunk their deans and House masters, and milk a mock cow. Presented by the College Deans Office, the event – the first-ever campus-wide, welcome-back celebration – will…

  • Campus & Community

    Faculty council meeting Sept. 21

    At its first meeting of the year on Sept. 21, the Faculty Council discussed the recommendations of the Task Forces on Women Faculty and on Women in Science and Engineering.

  • Campus & Community

    Rights, equality center stage at HLS events

    Two events at Harvard Law School (HLS) last week (Sept 15-18) focused attention on civil rights and economic equality and included a call to action from U.S. Sen. Barack Obama.

  • Campus & Community

    MacArthur ‘Genius’ Grant awarded to Goldie

    Public health researcher Sue Goldie, associate professor of health decision science at Harvard School of Public Health, has been awarded a $500,000 MacArthur grant for genius and creativity in applying the tools of decision science to evaluate the clinical benefits, public health impact, and cost-effectiveness of alternative preventive and treatment interventions for viruses that are…

  • Campus & Community

    They are born to add

    How does someone who hasn’t learned to count yet, say a preschooler, deal with numbers? Adults are comfortable with symbols like “10” to signify 10 balloons, beeps, or beliefs. But how do kids handle numbers when they don’t know numbers? Very well, according to experiments done at Harvard University. In these experiments, 5-year-olds, who had…

  • Science & Tech

    Ferreting out the first stars

    The first stars are so distant and formed so long ago that they are invisible to our best telescopes. Until they explode. Hypernovas (more powerful cousins of supernovas) and their associated gamma-ray bursts offer astronomers the possibility of detecting light from the first generations of stars. NASA’s Swift satellite already has seen a gamma-ray burst…

  • Campus & Community

    Alien abduction claims explained

    Abduction stories are strikingly similar. Victims wake up and find themselves paralyzed, unable to move or cry out for help.

  • Science & Tech

    Born to add

    In experiments, 5-year-olds, who had no real experience using number symbols, “added” two arrays of dots and compared them to a third array. When researchers replaced the third array of dots with beeps, the kids integrated the sight and sound quantities easily. The children performed all these tasks successfully, without actual counting or having any…

  • Science & Tech

    First baby photo of stellar twins

    Newborn stars are difficult to photograph. They tend to hide in the nebulous stellar nurseries where they formed, enshrouded by thick layers of dust. Now, Smithsonian astronomer T.K. Sridharan (Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics) and his colleagues have photographed a pair of stellar twins in infrared light, which penetrates the dust. And these babies are whoppers,…

  • Science & Tech

    Survey of Katrina evacuees in Houston: Half trapped in homes waited three days or more for rescue

    One-third (34 percent) of Katrina evacuees in a survey reported that they were trapped in their homes and had to be rescued. Half (50 percent) of those who were trapped said they waited three or more days to be rescued. Key health-related findings included: • 52 percent reported having no health insurance coverage at the…

  • Arts & Culture

    The Silk Road Ensemble

    Yo-Yo Ma and the Silk Road Ensemble perform during Learning From Performers, sponsored by Office for the Arts, September 2005.

  • Campus & Community

    It’s ‘Justice’ for all, thanks to HDV project

    With the goal of opening the Harvard classroom to distance learners, Harvard alumni, and possibly an international audience, all 26 lectures of Moral Reasoning 22: Justice, taught by Anne T. and Robert M. Bass Professor of Government Michael Sandel, will be filmed in high-definition video this fall.

  • Campus & Community

    Four under 35 years old land on ‘TR35’ list

    Massachusetts Institute of Technologys Technology Review magazine recently named four Harvard researchers to its 2005 list of top technology innovators under the age of 35. According to the magazine, the TR35 will shape our world for decades to come.

  • Campus & Community

    Newsmakers

    Sevcenko gets honorary degree Ihor Sevcenko, Dumbarton Oaks Professor of Byzantine History and Literature Emeritus in the Department of the Classics, was awarded an honorary doctorate of liberal arts from the Catholic University of Lublin (Poland) this past June. Founded in 1918 by the Episcopate of Poland, the university is the oldest Catholic higher education…

  • Campus & Community

    New HLS institute to explore race, justice

    Jesse Climenko Professor of Law Charles J. Ogletree Jr., the founding and executive director of the Charles Hamilton Houston Institute for Race and Justice (CHHI) at Harvard Law School (HLS), has announced that the institutes official opening will take place today (Sept. 15).

  • Campus & Community

    Constitution Day will be marked by Tribe lecture

    Laurence H. Tribe, the Carl M. Loeb University Professor and a nationally recognized expert on constitutional law, will present a lecture open to all students and staff, titled Remembering the Constitutions Future: Anticipating the Roberts Legacy? at noon Monday (Sept. 19) in Lowell Lecture Hall.