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  • Health

    Investigators discover method to stimulate brain rewiring after stroke

    After a stroke, brain cells die and their connections to other parts of the brain are lost. In a study with rats conducted at Children’s Hospital in Boston, a naturally occurring substance called inosine was shown to stimulate nerve cells in undamaged parts of the brain to grow new connections into brain areas that had…

  • Science & Tech

    RNA technology thwarts HIV

    RNA interference (RNAi) is a naturally occurring phenomenon by which cells guard themselves against viruses. The process involves post-transcriptional gene silencing in which specific RNA sequences get chopped into small pieces after binding to complementary short interfering RNAs (siRNA). These siRNAs can target either host mRNAs or viral genomic or messenger RNAs. As a consequence,…

  • Campus & Community

    Physicist Costas D. Papaliolios dies at 71

    Teaching fellow receives Rome Prize

  • Campus & Community

    2002 Harvard Board of Overseers and HAA Elected Directors are announced

    The President of the Harvard Alumni Association announced the results of the annual election of new members of the Harvard Board of Overseers and the HAA Elected Directors.

  • Campus & Community

    Harvard scientists contribute to National Academy terrorism report

    Harvard scientists contribute to National Academy terrorism report

  • Campus & Community

    2002 Harvard Board of Overseers and HAA Elected Directors are announced

    2002 Harvard Board of Overseers and HAA Elected Directors are announced

  • Campus & Community

    Gene patterns reveal disease risks

    A new discovery could make it much easier to find each person’s genetic risk of getting cancer, heart disease, Alzheimer’s, and other common diseases.

  • Campus & Community

    Two ‘scholars at risk’ fellows selected

    President Lawrence H. Summers has announced that Harvard University is participating in the Scholars at Risk Network and has selected its first two visiting fellows, Mehrangiz Kar and Wolde Mesfin, for the academic year 2002-03.

  • Campus & Community

    Alford to direct Graduate Legal Studies at HLS

    Law School Dean Robert C. Clark has announced that William Alford, the Henry L. Stimson Professor of Law, has been named director of Graduate and International Legal Studies at Harvard Law School. Alfords appointment will be effective July 1.

  • Campus & Community

    Ante- and post-diluvian* days 4

    From the front lines: Gazette reporters Ken Gewertz, Beth Potier, and Alvin Powell roamed through Commencement Day festivities, eyes, ears, and notebooks open. Some of their observations follow.

  • Campus & Community

    Ante- and post-diluvian* days 3

    From the front lines: Gazette reporters Ken Gewertz, Beth Potier, and Alvin Powell roamed through Commencement Day festivities, eyes, ears, and notebooks open. Some of their observations follow.

  • Campus & Community

    Ante- and post-diluvian* days 2

    From the front lines: Gazette reporters Ken Gewertz, Beth Potier, and Alvin Powell roamed through Commencement Day festivities, eyes, ears, and notebooks open. Some of their observations follow.

  • Campus & Community

    Ante- and post-diluvian* days 1

    From the front lines: Gazette reporters Ken Gewertz, Beth Potier, and Alvin Powell roamed through Commencement Day festivities, eyes, ears, and notebooks open. Some of their observations follow.

  • Campus & Community

    Erik Erikson still has something to say

    Erik Erikson, the psychologist who re-envisioned the human life cycle as a series of developmental stages, described the identity crisis, and popularized the genre of psychobiography with his books on Martin Luther and Mohandas Gandhi, would have been 100 years old on June 15.

  • Campus & Community

    Six new genes are linked to inherited breast cancer

    A decade of research into one of the worlds least-known diseases has resulted in the discovery of six genes linked to inherited breast cancer.

  • Campus & Community

    James Cuno ends 11-year tenure

    James Cuno, director of the Harvard University Art Museums, has been appointed director of the Courtauld Institute of Art to lead its transformation into an independent college of the University of London.

  • Campus & Community

    Crew clocks Yale at historic regatta

    Harvards heavyweight crew completed the sweep against Yale this past Saturday (June 8) at the 150th anniversary of the Harvard-Yale Regatta, Americas oldest intercollegiate athletic event. The Crimson won the four-mile varsity race on the Thames River by 41.8 seconds, the largest margin in 27 years, with a time of 19:02.5. Yale finished at 19:43.8.

  • Campus & Community

    Tabla rasa

    During a full-day colloquium on Teaching with the World Wide Web, Gina Siesing, senior specialist for instructional computing, Instructional Computing Group, discusses Designing Assignments for Curricular Change.

  • Campus & Community

    Newsmakers

    Teaching fellow receives Rome Prize

  • Campus & Community

    Lewis A. Tyler, leader in international education

    Lewis A. Tyler, a force for the advancement of Latin America and the Caribbean through international education, died May 30 in Boston.

  • Campus & Community

    Police Reports

    Following are some of the incidents reported to the Harvard University Police Department (HUPD) for the week ending Saturday, June 8. The official log is located at 1033 Massachusetts Ave. (sixth floor).

  • Campus & Community

    This month in Harvard History

    June 1894 – The newly incorporated Radcliffe College holds its first Commencement in the auditorium of Fay House. At the request of President Elizabeth Cary Agassiz, the graduates wear pretty, simple dresses instead of caps and gowns, which Agassiz deems excessively masculine and potentially provocative.

  • Campus & Community

    Erratum

    In the degree chart on page 24 of last weeks Gazette, the figures for the Law Schools doctor of juridical science and doctor of law degrees should have been 546 and 8, respectively.

  • Campus & Community

    Education secretary touts public school reform

    U.S. Secretary of Education Rod Paige told a Kennedy School conference on education and accountability Monday (June 10) that the Bush administrations reform program of testing, accountability, and school choice is a solution for American schools that are failing to educate a sizeable number of children

  • Campus & Community

    Cooking up quite a story

    Think about this the next time youre waiting for your burgers to cook on the grill: How was cooking invented? Today, all societies depend on cooked food, but when and how did cooking begin?

  • Science & Tech

    Cooking up a story of apes and humans

    For humans, cooking played a major role in the development of smaller jaws and teeth, bigger brains, smaller guts, shorter arms, and longer legs, according to Richard Wrangham, professor of biological anthropology at Harvard University. He also believes that cooking is associated with females getting heavier and more fertile. That, in turn, changed mating and…

  • Health

    Six new breast cancer-susceptibility genes found

    The discovery of six new cancer-susceptibility genes grew out of more than 10 years of research by Alan D’Andrea into Fanconi anemia, a condition known to affect only 500 families in the United States. Children born with the condition usually develop bone marrow failure early in life, leaving them unable to produce oxygen-carrying red blood…

  • Science & Tech

    The next big thing in mining the genome

    About 99.9 percent of the 3.1 billion base pairs in the human genome are the same from person to person. The remaining 0.1 percent of differences comprises more than 10 million common single-letter genetic variations (and many more rare variants) scattered through the genome. By the numbers, a comprehensive search for the multiple genetic contributions…

  • Campus & Community

    Commencement week: Feature photos

    Bac break Soojin Yim and Abby Schlatter (foreground) rest before joining other members of the Class of 2002 at the Baccalaureate Service at the Memorial Church on June 4. (Staff photo by Kris Snibbe) Beyond the stacks Framed by endless chairs, Joe Linhard ’03 (carrying a mattress in background) cleans out dorm rooms where visiting…