Health

Test header in Block

Subheading

1 min read
transgender crowd of people seamless pattern.

transgender crowd of people seamless pattern. International Transgender Day,31 March. Different people marching on the pride parade. Human rights.transgender person.transgender pride flag. transgender Pride month concept.Online Dating.

text with link.

This is a quiz.

Some text

Alexander Dyer.

Quo modo autem philosophus loquitur? Tecum optime, deinde etiam cum mediocri amico. Invidiosum nomen est, infame, suspectum.

Alexander Dyer.

Quo modo autem philosophus loquitur? Tecum optime, deinde etiam cum mediocri amico. Invidiosum nomen est, infame, suspectum.

  • list item
  • list item
  • list item
Alexander Dyer.

Quo modo autem philosophus loquitur? Tecum optime, deinde etiam cum mediocri amico. Invidiosum nomen est, infame, suspectum.

  • “Bollywood” star shines at Harvard:

    The students of the South Asian Association, Dharma, and the Harvard Foundation welcomed renowned Nepalese actress and Bollywood star, Manisha Koirala (left) to Harvard on Friday (Nov. 8). Before a packed Boylston Hall audience, the popular Koirala presented clips from her latest film Escape from Taliban and spoke on Hindu-Muslim relations and women in films.…

  • Scientists look inside antimatter:

    The Starship Enterprise is propelled through the universe of science fiction by a rocket fuel that combines ordinary matter and antimatter. When the two meet, they annihilate each other in a burst of energy that thrusts the starship from galaxy to galaxy.

  • Allston:

    Well have done enough groundwork to back up a decision, said Kathy Spiegelman, associate vice president for planning and real estate, who was recently appointed chief University planner and director of the Allston Initiative. She takes over the new position Jan. 1, 2003.

  • Prying the lid off the FDA

    Even though asthma is responsible for more deaths and more hospitalizations than arthritis in the United States, the greater political influence of arthritis sufferers prompts the federal Food and Drug…

  • Incidence of hip fractures reduced by walking

    In the United States, one in every three adults 65 years old or older falls each year, with hip fractures resulting in the greatest number of deaths and most serious…

  • McElroy says it’s time to stop seeing global warming as political issue

    Michael B. McElroy, Gilbert Butler Professor of Environmental Studies and director of Harvard’s Center for the Environment, is among the scientists who since the 1970s have been using paleoclimatic data…

  • Scientists look inside antimatter

    “We have obtained the first glimpse inside an antihydrogen atom, and this is a significant step on the way to precision measurements that will allow matter/antimatter comparisons to be made,”…

  • FDR slept here:

    The toilet runs, there’s graffiti on the windows and a former resident left behind some belongings.

  • New device documents clot formation in living mice

    In the October 2002 issue of the journal Nature Medicine, Bruce and Barbara Furie, both Harvard Medical School professors of medicine at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, reportrf on the…

  • Enzyme linked to pathology of Parkinson’s disease appears two-faced

    A finding by Harvard Medical School researchers adds a new wrinkle to the story of Parkinson’s disease and insight into how failure to dispose of proteins can wreak havoc on…

  • Faculty of Arts and Sciences – Memorial Minute:

    At a meeting of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences on October 15, 2002, the following Minute was placed upon the records.

  • Peabody Museum, friends celebrate ‘Day of Dead’:

    According to legend, spirits of the dead are drawn to the smell of marigolds. Since ancient times, the flowers have been scattered in villages throughout Mesoamerica on Dia de los Muertos, Day of the Dead, to lure the souls of departed family members and friends.

  • Reconciling faith with feminism:

    Ms. Magazine co-founder Letty Cottin Pogrebin remembers attending a Women and Identity conference in the 1970s and being asked, with all the conferees, to stand beneath a sign – black, Latina, woman, Jew – that best identified her.

  • Mikhail Gorbachev to speak at Sanders:

    Mikhail Gorbachev, former leader of the Soviet Union, will speak on Looking Back on Perestroika at Sanders Theatre on Monday (Nov. 11).

  • Stavins steps down but not out:

    Professor Robert Stavins stepped down last month after five years at the helm of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agencys (EPA) top economic advisory board, during which time he helped to raise the profile of economic thinking about environmental problems and to standardize economic analysis in EPA decisions.

  • Faculty Council notice

    At its fifth meeting of the year the Faculty Council heard a report from Professor Cynthia Friend (chemistry and chemical biology), associate dean of the faculty, on the plans of the committee which she chairs to review the appointments processes in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences. Deans Vincent Tompkins and Rebecca Wasserman (Academic Affairs)…

  • Helping homeless women:

    When Katya Fels 93 was a Harvard student, she discovered that the undergraduate women she counseled on the Response hotline for survivors of sexual assault had a lot in common with the homeless women she met as co-director of the Harvard Square Homeless Shelter.

  • Perestroika’s restructuring still bearing fruit

    Echoes of the reforms that ended the former Soviet Union are still reverberating in Russia and other former Soviet Republics, Mikhail Gorbachev, the Soviet Union’s last leader and the man who implemented those world-altering changes, told a packed Sanders Theatre Monday (Nov. 11).

  • Candlelight vigil longs for peaceful world

    Standing on a damp floor of yellow pine needles in a misty rain, a group of about 20 people were gathered in front of Andover Hall on Monday evening (Nov. 4) to pray for a peaceful community and a peaceful world. As Belva Brown Jordan, assistant dean of student life at the Divinity School, spoke…

  • Church to mark 70th anniversary:

    The Memorial Church is set to mark its 70th anniversary Sunday (Nov. 10) during its annual Commemoration of Benefactors and of the War Dead.

  • Thirty-five cultural groups score grants

    The Students and Faculty Advisory Committee of the Harvard Foundation for Intercultural and Race Relations recently approved grants totaling more than $25,000 for Harvard College student groups to support programs that focus on culture, ethnicity, and race. These grants will support speakers, panel discussions, workshops, performances, publications, banquets, and other activities proposed by student organizations.

  • Twelve 2002-03 Administrative Fellows are named

    Twelve new fellows have been selected for the 2002-03 Administrative Fellowship Program. Of the new fellows, eight are visiting fellows and four are resident fellows. Visiting fellows are talented professionals drawn from business, education, and the professions outside the University, while resident fellows are minority professionals currently working at Harvard who are identified by their…

  • Kyoto first city in series on art and architecture:

    Since Kyoto does not have its own airport, most visitors arrive by rail, disembarking in the citys new railway station, designed by Japanese architect Hiroshi Hara and completed in 1999 at a cost of more than $1 billion. The station is huge, comprising a theater, a hotel, a department store, and colossal public spaces defined…

  • Summers addresses school superintendents

    Summers addresses school superintendents

  • Department of Social Medicine welcomes fellows

    Department of Social Medicine welcomes fellows

  • GIS user group holds first symposium

    Harvards Geographic Information Science (GIS) User Group will celebrate GIS Day by holding its first symposium – GIS at Harvard and Beyond – at the Science Centers Lecture Hall D on Nov. 20. The symposium will include demonstrations, poster presentations, and panel discussions from noon to 7 p.m.

  • Free flu vaccines will be available throughout campus

    In an effort to combat the flu across campus this season, University Health Services (UHS) will be providing free flu vaccines to all members of the Harvard community. The walk-in clinics are being held at the following locations:

  • Teething for adults in foreseeable future:

    Wondering whether to choose a bridge or an implant to fill that unsightly gap in your pearly whites? If youre willing to wait a few years, you may have another option – growing your own.

  • Bodkin is patching up depression

    Imagine easing the blues of people who suffer from depression, the most common mental illness in the world, with a simple skin patch. Alexander Bodkin, a Harvard psychiatrist, did. Now, after years of setbacks, he and his colleagues have successfully tested an antidepressant patch that works without the side effects of the most popular pill…

  • Food pathogen vector shows promise against cancer:

    Listeria and certain strains of E. coli are the scourge of picnics, but researchers at Harvard Medical School (HMS) and Londons Hammersmith Hospital show in the November Gene Therapy that combining bacterial components of these bad bugs can create a powerful vector against melanoma-challenged mice. A vector is a kind of delivery vehicle that can…