Today in Photos (3/23/11)


A group of students listen to Lee Ann Michelson, of the OCS pre-medical advising staff, as she gives helpful tips about the personal statement and other various parts of the Medical School application.

Exploring the consequences of a cascading disaster
Panelists Jun Kurihara, Senior Fellow at the Harvard Kennedy School and Shoji Tsuchida, Professor of Risk & Social Psychology at Kansai University, Osaka, Japan explore the consequences of the cascading disaster in Japan

Architect Junya Ishigami Speaks
An audience listens as the Japanese architect Junya Ishigami discusses his recent works at the Graduate School of Design Thursday night. This lecture is part of the series A New Innocence: Emerging Trends in Japanese.

Origami Study Break
Students explore the complex art of origami as a part of a study break workshop during Harvard for Japan Week on Tuesday, March 22, 2011 in Quincy Dining Hall. Their goal is to fold one thousand paper cranes. Known as "Senbazuru" in Japanese, a thousand paper cranes symbolize a wish for speedy recovery from disaster or illness.

On Information Theory
James Gleick '76 answers a question about the nature of information and information gathering at the Brattle Theatre on Tuesday, March 22, 2011. Hosted by the Harvard Bookstore, this event featured readings from Gleick's new book "The Information: A History, a Theory, a Flood."

GETTING IT DONE
Rookie pitcher Laura Ricciardone, shown here in earlier action, had three strikeouts in four innings en route to earning the win in Harvard’s 2-1 victory over Boston University. Junior Rachel Brown earned the save.

GOLDEN GIRL
Jennifer Botterill ’02-’03 won national championship in her freshman year at Harvard and never looked back. Botterill has won three Olympic gold medals and five world championships with the Canadian national team.

Harvard Business School
Founded in 1908, Harvard Business School remains one of the world’s premier institutions for management education, but was ranked second among business schools, behind Stanford, by U.S. News and World Report.

Harvard Business School
Founded in 1908, Harvard Business School remains one of the world’s premier institutions for management education, but was ranked second among business schools, behind Stanford, by U.S. News and World Report.

Tags

College, Women's Ice Hockey, Softball, Graduate School of Design, Quincy, Harvard Business School, Japan

Film

"Gatsby" Not So Great

University Finances

Faust's Earnings in 2011 Much Lower Than Those of Other University Presidents and Top Harvard Employees

Features

Female HLS Graduates Enter a Job Market Dominated by Men

Harvard Law School

In HLS Classes, Women Fall Behind