Headlines from Harvard history, July-Augut 1913-1993

From the pages of the Harvard Alumni Bulletin and Harvard Magazine

1913 

Construction is underway on the new Larz Anderson Bridge, connecting Cambridge and Boston, with completion expected before the Yale Game.

1943 

Widener Library receives 11,000 books, pamphlets, and periodicals belonging to Theodore Roosevelt, A.B. 1880, LL.D. 1902, including 150 personal scrapbooks and manuscripts, and microfilm copies of thousands of his letters.

1953 

Asked to comment on fellow Appleton, Wisconsin, resident Nathan Marsh Pusey ’28, Ph.D. ’37, Senator Joseph P. McCarthy describes Harvard’s president-elect as a “rabid anti anti-Communist” and is promptly chastised by most of the national press.

Student housing remains a problem. Only 10 percent of incoming freshmen are commuters, compared with 25 percent in the 1920s and 15 percent in recent years.

1963 

The College Pump reports that “at the exact moment the representative of the Twenty-Fifth Reunion Class presented the imposing Class gift of over a million dollars to President Pusey, a dramatic lighting bolt flashed across the western sky.”

1973 

President Derek C. Bok’s name appears on the list of “political enemies” of the Nixon administration submitted to the Senate Watergate committee by John Dean. Possible explanations include Bok’s opposition to the nomination of Judge G. Harrold Carswell to the Supreme Court, and his Washington trip to protest the invasion of Cambodia.

The Department of Health, Education, and Welfare’s Boston office criticizes the University’s affirmative-action plan, specifically the dearth of “a department-by-department breakdown of goals and timetables for the hiring of minorities and women in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences.”

1988 

Harvard announces plans to replace the 48-year-old Colonial-style Gulf station at the intersection of Mass. Ave. and Harvard Street with a “moderately priced” 150 to 200-room inn.

1993 

Noting that in the past academic year, 64 percent of freshmen had Unix e-mail accounts, but only 42 percent of seniors did, the editors explain, “Computer technology at Harvard is advancing…[so rapidly] that seniors are substantially less computer literate than Yardlings.”

You might also like

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. 

Free Speech, the Bomb—and Donald Trump

A Harvard cardiologist on the unlikely alliances that shaped a global movement to prevent nuclear war

Most popular

The Trump Administration's Impact on Higher Education

Unprecedented federal actions against research funding, diversity, speech, and more

Harvard art historian Jennifer Roberts teaches the value of immersive attention

Teaching students the value of deceleration and immersive attention

How MAGA Went Mainstream at Harvard

Trump, TikTok, and the pandemic are reshaping Gen Z politics.

Explore More From Current Issue

Whimsical illustration of students rushing through ornate campus gate from bus marked “Welcome New Students.”

Highlights from Harvard’s Past

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

Colorful illustration of woman multitasking with laptop, baby bottle, toy, and checklist.

Motherhood and Ambition in a Pronatalist World

Gen Z is confronting the age-old question of balance—with a new twist.

Johnston Gate

Your Views on Harvard’s Standoff, Antisemitism, and More

Readers comment on the controversial July-August cover, authoritarianism, and scientific research.