Yesterday's News

Headlines from Harvard history

 1929

Construction crews are busy pouring foundations for the first units of the new “houses” on Plympton and DeWolfe streets, raising the steel frame of the new athletic building, and converting Boylston Hall from a mostly science to a mostly nonscience facility.

 

 1944

Thomas J. Watson, president of IBM, formally presents Harvard with the “revolutionary” Automatic Sequence Controlled Calculator, 51 feet long and eight feet high, the brainchild in part of associate professor turned naval commander Howard H. Aiken, Ph.D. ’39. 

*  *  *

President James Bryant Conant offers Harvard’s Dumbarton Oaks estate in Washington, D.C., for a conference of delegates from Britain, Russia, and the United States to plan for the preservation of peace in the postwar world.  

 

 1949

Fully air-conditioned Lamont Library, open to both sexes during summer school, becomes the center of activity during the hottest Cambridge summer yet recorded.

 

 1954

Hurricane Carol strikes with 120-mile-per-hour winds on August 31, toppling three of the oldest elms in the Yard, de-roofing the Newell Boathouse shed, and dropping a finial through the roof of Memorial Hall.

 

 1964

Post-Commencement statistics reveal that, excluding those seniors headed for engineering, research, and technical jobs, the Peace Corps (at 16 percent) accounts for the largest segment of new graduates.  

 

 1969

Early in the morning of August 20, a man attempting to steal Widener's two-volume Gutenberg Bible falls approximately 50 feet from a rope into an interior courtyard of the library, breaking his leg and cracking his skull. The Bible is recovered in excellent condition apart from damage to the bindings, which were not original. 

 

 1974

New studies offer various plans for improving Harvard Square: among the issues involved are the dearth of parking spaces and debates about rerouting cars, proposed guidelines for real-estate development, and Harvard’s own long-range development plans. 

Related topics

You might also like

Highlights from Harvard’s Past

The rise of Cambridge cyclists, a lettuce boycott, and Julia Child’s cookbooks

In Sermon, Garber Urges Harvard Community to ‘Defend and Protect’ Institutions

Harvard’s president uses traditional Memorial Church address to encourage divergent views.

Highlights from Harvard’s Past

The Medical School goes coed, University poet wins Nobel Prize. 

Most popular

Harvard Alumni Affairs Databases Breached

The University is investigating the cyberattack, which may have compromised the personal information of alumni, donors, students, faculty, and staff.

Harvard Football: Yale 45, Harvard 28

A wild weekend: a debacle in The Game, then a berth in the playoffs.

The Secrets Glaciers Tell

A Harvard class explores the glacial legacy of pollution emitted by the Roman Empire

Explore More From Current Issue

Students in purple jackets seated on chairs, facing away in a grassy area.

A New Prescription for Youth Mental Health

Kenyan entrepreneur Tom Osborn ’20 reimagines care for a global crisis.

A man in a gray suit sits confidently in a vintage armchair, holding a glass.

The Life of a Harvard Spy

Richard Skeffington Welch’s illustrious—and clandestine—career in the CIA