Letters

Cambridge 02138

"Ask me what College class I was in," says Harvard Alumni Association president Charles L. Brock, "and I have to admit I don't...

September-October 2002

Features

Letter from Kayenta

I live among the red rocks of the Southwest and the "red men" who are native to them. The Navajo Reservation is a desolate place with...

Testing Trap

Supporters of the reauthorization, last January, of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act hail it for tightening school accountability...

Charles Follen

Student revolutionary, political refugee, gymnastics instructor, radical abolitionist clergyman: German-born Karl Follen was an unusual Harvard...

The Cult of the Charismatic CEO

In 1997, one of the blue-chip icons of corporate America, AT&T, was in trouble and seeking a new leader. The company was operating in a...

by Craig Lambert

Dorm Decor

"To me [my room] will always be haunted by my companions who have been there, by the books that I have read there, by the pleasure and the...

Reverence for the Object

  "...in every prosperous municipality in the land, in the next ten years the call is likely to come for thoroughly equipped...

RIGHT NOW Harvard research and ideas

Inhibited Killers

Until recently, teenage violence was widely considered a deplorable and tragic phenomenon of inner cities. Experts linked childhood aggression...

Behind the Rampages

Their names—and their respective tragedies—are now a part of the American lexicon: Littleton, Colorado; Paducah, Kentucky; Jonesboro...

Global Sushi

A fishing boat in the harbor of Gloucester, Massachusetts. Just 12 years ago, an astounded world looked on as McDonald's served its...

The Party Line on Flab

If obesity were a symbol of success, the United States would be a boomtown on the frontier of flab. But excess fat isn't a measure of...

John Harvard's Journal University news

Allston Update

Just two years ago, Harvard seemed flush with investment profits and generous campaign donations. Former president Neil L. Rudenstine had raised...

Harvard Patterns

Every time a Harvard office hires an architect, designer, or planner—and that happens frequently—plans and maps and other kinds of...

Getting Centered

Almost unnoticed, much of the University's scholarly work has migrated from departments and individual professors' offices to...

Neighbors on Edge

Residents bordering Harvard have turned building projects into political battlegrounds. Below, a Harvard rejoinder. More than five...

Developmental Troubles

When the Harvard Institute for International Development (HIID) was disbanded in 2000, it meant the disappearance of the University's largest...

Laura Justine Garwin

Laura Justine Garwin Photograph by Stu Rosner After trumpeting with Harvard's jazz, concert, and marching bands, the Bach Society...

Stop the Presses

Harvard has gotten out of the printing business for the third time in its history. On June 17 the University shed the 23 workers composing the...

Of Religious Education and Rotten Cabbage

Pop quiz: Who should be credited with the founding of Harvard College? No, not John Harvard. Try Anne Hutchinson, who was banished to Rhode...

H-R History Online

Have you an urgent need to know the number of genito-urinary disorders in horses that doctors treated at the Free Clinic of Harvard's Veterinary...

Mastering in the '70s

In the spring of 1973 Harvard president Derek Bok asked my husband, Jim Vorenberg, to be master of Dunster House. We had been married three...

Malkin Renewal

Nothing exceeds like success. Last summer, the Malkin Athletic Center (MAC) installed some new exercise equipment, completely refurbishing its...

University People

Bridging a Graduate Gap A scientist follows an historian of science, as James M. Hogle and Doreen Hogle succeed Everett I. Mendelsohn and Mary...

HOLLIS Improved

Choosing the relative peace of July, when the inevitable bugs could be dealt with calmly, the University Library released a greatly improved...

Brevia

Spirits of the Law  Since January 1999, when then-provost Harvey V. Fineberg promulgated it, Harvard's policy has been to prohibit...

China Summer

Jinhua, a prefecture composed of eight counties in the middle of Zhejiang Province—six hours by slow train south of Shanghai—is hot...

First Impression

Anna Harkey's cylinder seal, when rolled across damp clay, yields an autobiography in relief. The image includes her name in English, the year...

First-year Double-talk

It is one of the paradoxes of the Harvard experience that the admissions process demands self-promotion, but the epilogue to the admissions...

Catcher on the Fly

The game's turning point—and perhaps the play that locked up last year's Ivy football title—came with 6:57 left in the third period...

Historic Henley

Even given the storied history of Harvard crew, it was an unprecedented day. On Sunday, July 7, the final day of the Henley Royal Regatta in...

Harvard Squared What to do in Boston, Cambridge and beyond

Harvard Calendar

SPECIAL The thirty-third annual ice-skating exhibition An Evening with Champions, organized by the students at Eliot House, takes place at the...

Almuni Harvardians far and wide

Jolson & Company

Their physical resemblance is striking. Yet deeper ties connect Al Jolson, the twentieth century's first superstar, and Stephen Mo Hanan '68...

"Only" a Law School Man

"Ask me what College class I was in," says Harvard Alumni Association president Charles L. Brock, "and I have to admit I don't...

HAA News

Web Sights It may sound counterintuitive to hail an electronic print directory of works of visual art, but the debut of the Harvard University...

Carrier Commander

As captain of the USS John F. Kennedy, patroling the north Arabian Sea, Ronald H. Henderson Jr. '76 has been directly involved in the American...

Disease Fighter

Barry Wald '78 was diagnosed with Steinert's Disease, a rare form of muscular dystrophy (MD), 13 years ago. Because of the muscle deterioration...

Yesterday's News

1922 The Harvard community is delighted that Leavitt and Peirce, long the unofficial "headquarters for Harvard men," has a new...

School CEO

Ever since Chicago mayor Richard M. Daley named Arne Duncan '86 chief executive officer of the city's public schools in June 2001, many...