Month: June 2011

  • Science & Tech

    In the Arboretum, another world

    The Arboretum is so serene and languid it can seem almost imaginary. On a warm summer day, dogs and runners and bicyclists all share the nearly silent space under the shade of giant and rare trees of odd shapes and sizes.

  • Campus & Community

    Surrounded by nature & reflected in it

    From the oversize windows in the room called “the Fishbowl” at Currier House, you can see lush green grass and blossoming trees on alternate sloping hillsides.

  • Campus & Community

    Ramanathan honored as Pew Scholar

    Harvard University’s Sharad Ramanathan, assistant professor of molecular and cellular biology, has been named a Pew Scholar in the Biomedical Sciences.

  • Campus & Community

    Justice Goes Global

    Michael J. Sandel, the Harvard University political philosopher, is a rock star in Asia, and people in China, Japan and South Korea scalp tickets to hear him..

  • Campus & Community

    TV time tied to diabetes, death

    People who spend more hours in front of the television are at greater risk of dying, or developing diabetes and heart disease…

  • Campus & Community

    Century-old tortilla chip in a Harvard collection

    Harvard has been collecting things for a long time, probably beginning with the donation of a library by its namesake, John Harvard…

  • Campus & Community

    Celebrating arts, athletics, scholarship

    These photos offer an in-depth look into life at Winthrop House.

  • Science & Tech

    Hyper-public spaces

    A symposium sponsored by Harvard’s Berkman Center for Internet & Society explored the design of public and private spaces in the digital realm.

  • Health

    How ovarian cancer spreads

    Harvard Medical School researchers find that ovarian cancer cells use mechanical force to move through tissue and colonize additional organs.

  • Campus & Community

    Cordeiro Health Policy Summer Research Grants announced

    The Interfaculty Initiative in Health Policy has announced the 2011 recipients of the Cordeiro Health Policy Summer Research Grants.

  • Science & Tech

    History shines through the glass

    Researchers are examining the Harvard Semitic Museum’s collection of ancient glass for clues about the people who made it and their interactions with other societies through trade.

  • Health

    A living laser

    In a new report, Harvard researchers Malte Gather and Seok-Hyun Yun describe how a single cell genetically engineered to express green fluorescent protein can be used to amplify the light particles called photons into nanosecond-long pulses of laser light.

  • Campus & Community

    Human cell becomes living laser

    Scientists have for the first time created laser light using living biological material: a single human cell and some jellyfish protein.

  • Campus & Community

    Study ties bullying, domestic violence

    Boys who are bullies are nearly four times as likely as non-bullies to grow up to physically or sexually abuse their female partners

  • Arts & Culture

    Around the world in many ways

    Historian Joyce Chaplin is completing her latest book, on the history and influence of circumnavigation. For her, globalization is an old story.

  • Health

    New face for chimp-attack victim

    A Connecticut woman who was badly disfigured when she was mauled by a pet chimpanzee in 2009 received a full face transplant during surgery at Harvard-affiliated Brigham and Women’s Hospital.

  • Campus & Community

    The stream of experience

    Since creation of the House system by Harvard President Abbott Lawrence Lowell in the 1930s, the cultures and traditions of the residential Houses have been continually transformed by students and members of the Harvard community. During the school year, students engage in a range of activities such as staging a performance about race relations in…

  • Arts & Culture

    The artistic side of science

    The new Transit Gallery in Gordon Hall at Harvard Medical School lets students and staffers appreciate the fine arts while getting from place to place.

  • Science & Tech

    Tut, tut!

    Ralph Mitchell, a Harvard professor and authority on cultural heritage microbiology, investigates “fingerprints” left on the walls of Egyptian King Tutankhamen’s tomb by ancient microbes.

  • Campus & Community

    Blumenthal tapped for top spot

    David Blumenthal, the Samuel O. Thier Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School, has been named chairman of the Commonwealth Fund Commission on a High Performance Health System.

  • Health

    What makes them special

    Researchers at Joslin Diabetes Center, a Harvard Medical School affiliate, examine why a select group of long-term type 1 diabetes survivors show so few complications.

  • Science & Tech

    Finding the genetic trail

    Harvard Medical School researchers have traced the influence of genes from sub-Saharan Africa in European, Middle Eastern, and Jewish populations, quantifying the intermingling that occurred over many generations.

  • Campus & Community

    A gathering of goals

    A growing community of campus support groups, especially minority affinity groups, are helping the University to understand and embrace diversity.

  • Campus & Community

    The way we were

    Donald Freeman Brown ’30, who is 102 and a retired archaeologist, digs back into the days of “ancient” Harvard.

  • Health

    No cheeks, no problem

    Harvard biologist Alfred W. Crompton shows that dogs drink not with a messy scoop of the tongue, but in a way similar to that of cats — by using adhesion and inertia to pull water from the bowl into their mouths.

  • Health

    VHA vs. Medicare: And the winner is …

    A Harvard Medical School-led study shows that cancer care provided by the Veterans Health Administration for men 65 years and older is at least as good as, and by some measures better than, Medicare-funded fee-for-service care obtained through the private sector.

  • Health

    Increasing odds for survival

    A duo of drugs, each targeting a prime survival strategy of tumors, can be safely administered and is potentially more effective than either drug alone for advanced, inoperable melanomas, according to a phase 1 clinical trial led by Harvard investigators at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute.

  • Nation & World

    The threat of nuclear terror

    Joint U.S.-Russian assessment, produced in part through Harvard Kennedy School, warns of ongoing threat from nuclear terror, and says quick action is needed to avoid attack.

  • Health

    It doesn’t add up

    An important new finding by Harvard researchers indicates that cellular mutations responsible for an organism’s successful adaptation do not, when combined over time, provide as much benefit as they would individually be expected to provide.