Yesterday’s News

From the pages of the Harvard Alumni Bulletin and Harvard Magazine

Illustration by Mark Steele

 1910 

Thanks to the local construction company building the Cambridge portion of the new subway system, several thousand carts of earth are secured to fill in the lower part of Soldiers Field, which will be used as playing fields by Harvard teams.

 1920 

The Business School adds regular instruction in labor relations to its curriculum.

 1930 

A carillon of 21 Russian church bells, weighing 27 tons, has arrived in Cambridge to be installed in the Lowell House tower as a gift from an anonymous donor.

 1940 

Concern over Nazi victories in Europe prompts the creation of a 400-member Faculty Defense Group, the Harvard Student Defense League organizes military-drill practices, and more than 130 undergraduates apply for a pilot-training course. Harvard announces that students enlisting in the armed forces or drafted are liable only for the portion of tuition and fees incurred prior to their departure.

 1955 

Harvard College welcomes its first Advanced Placement freshmen, and the Divinity School registers its first women graduate students.

 1960 

Leverett Towers and the Loeb Drama Center open for business.

 1985 

The newly created Harvard-Radcliffe Grocery Society, or “Grocery Table,” organizes petitions for the return of Classic Coke in House dining halls. The group’s charter mandates that members “promote student awareness of an appreciation for the grocery sciences, especially produce, dairy products, and other foodstuffs” and guide their actions by the official motto: Vivere Melius Per Condimenta (“Better Living Through Groceries”).

 1995 

Boylston professor of rhetoric and oratory Seamus Heaney, “a frizzy-haired man of great amiability, for whom many at Harvard feel warm affection,” wins the Nobel Prize in Literature “for works of lyrical beauty and ethical depth, which exalt everyday miracles and the living past.”

Click here for the September-October 2015 issue table of contents

You might also like

We Were Students Once...

Young love: the poem, plus enduring lessons from a public-health pioneer

Alice Hamilton

Brief life of a public-health pioneer and reformer: 1869-1970

The Unruly Academy

President emeritus Neil L. Rudenstine on changes in the academy and society that made universities more contentious—and diminished support for humane learning

Most popular

FAS Dean Outlines Preparations for Loss of Federal Funding

“To preserve our mission, we must act now,” Hoekstra says at faculty meeting

Danielle Allen Debates Far-Right Blogger Curtis Yarvin

Popular monarchist debates Allen on democracy.

The New Gender Gaps

What to do as men and boys fall behind

Explore More From Current Issue

The Sum of Our Choices

On the limitations of a prevailing worldview

Harvard Percussionist and Composer Jessie Cox

An experimental percussionist-composer pushing the limits of music

Making Green Energy Projects Financially Viable

A proposed “green” swap enables decarbonization of emerging market development projects.