News News Events All News Stories All news stories Filter by Topics Academics Active Learning Labs Dean REEF Makerspace AI / Machine Learning Allston Campus Alumni Applied Computation Applied Mathematics Applied Physics Awards Bioengineering Climate Computer Science Cooking COVID-19 Design Diversity / Inclusion Electrical Engineering Entrepreneurship Environment Environmental Science & Engineering Ethics Events Geoengineering Graduate Student Profile Health / Medicine Industry K-12 Master of Design Engineering Materials Materials Science & Mechanical Engineering MS/MBA Optics / Photonics Planetary Science Quantum Engineering Robotics Student Organizations Technology Undergraduate Student Profile Date Showing 2800 of 2985 results Apr 24, 2008 Bioengineer describes the growing problem of IEDs and his efforts to study brain injury Kit Parker discusses his ongoing fight to understand and one day treat brain trauma caused by improvised explosive devices (Technology Review) Apr 18, 2008 Collaboration explained The Spring 2008 issue of GSAS's Colloquy features "Engineering Gets Social," a look at how grad students collaborate across fields Apr 11, 2008 I is for Innovation Bright ideas shined more brightly thanks to the Harvard College Innovation Challenge. Undergrads took home $50k in prizes at an award ceremony (Crimson). Apr 9, 2008 Senior Connie Cheng awarded the 2007 Colonel and Mrs. S.S. Dennis, III Scholarship $1,000 prize recognizes outstanding academic achievements by an undergraduate in engineering sciences Apr 4, 2008 Harvard Foundation names Scientist of Year NASA astronaut Stephanie Wilson '88 was named Scientist of the Year by the Harvard Foundation Apr 2, 2008 Engineering the Harvard Engineer "One man's determined quest to make Harvard a contender in engineering—after 372 years." (IEEE Spectrum) Mar 16, 2008 The frustrations (and mathematics) of folding a map L. Mahadevan talks about the applied mathematics behind folding maps (NPR). Mar 13, 2008 Inhaled tuberculosis vaccine may be more effective than injected vaccine Animal study very promising Mar 7, 2008 Whale-inspired wind turbines Mimicking the bumps on humpback-whale fins could lead to more efficient wind turbines Mar 1, 2008 Turning a corner How Harvard is restoring "engineering to its once-prominent spot." (ASEE's PRISM) Pagination First page « Previous page ‹ … Page 278 Page 279 Current page 280 Page 281 Page 282 … Page 298 298 Page 299 299 Next page › Last page »
Apr 24, 2008 Bioengineer describes the growing problem of IEDs and his efforts to study brain injury Kit Parker discusses his ongoing fight to understand and one day treat brain trauma caused by improvised explosive devices (Technology Review)
Apr 18, 2008 Collaboration explained The Spring 2008 issue of GSAS's Colloquy features "Engineering Gets Social," a look at how grad students collaborate across fields
Apr 11, 2008 I is for Innovation Bright ideas shined more brightly thanks to the Harvard College Innovation Challenge. Undergrads took home $50k in prizes at an award ceremony (Crimson).
Apr 9, 2008 Senior Connie Cheng awarded the 2007 Colonel and Mrs. S.S. Dennis, III Scholarship $1,000 prize recognizes outstanding academic achievements by an undergraduate in engineering sciences
Apr 4, 2008 Harvard Foundation names Scientist of Year NASA astronaut Stephanie Wilson '88 was named Scientist of the Year by the Harvard Foundation
Apr 2, 2008 Engineering the Harvard Engineer "One man's determined quest to make Harvard a contender in engineering—after 372 years." (IEEE Spectrum)
Mar 16, 2008 The frustrations (and mathematics) of folding a map L. Mahadevan talks about the applied mathematics behind folding maps (NPR).
Mar 13, 2008 Inhaled tuberculosis vaccine may be more effective than injected vaccine Animal study very promising
Mar 7, 2008 Whale-inspired wind turbines Mimicking the bumps on humpback-whale fins could lead to more efficient wind turbines
Mar 1, 2008 Turning a corner How Harvard is restoring "engineering to its once-prominent spot." (ASEE's PRISM)