Related Items
Encarta Search
Search Encarta about Harvard University

Windows Live® Search Results

  • Welcome to Harvard University

    Harvard University, which celebrated its 350th anniversary in 1986, is the oldest institution of higher learning in the United States. Founded 16 years after the arrival of the ...

  • Steven Pinker

    Department of Psychology Harvard University: Participate in a study

  • GLOBAL TRADE NEGOTIATIONS

    News articles, working papers and links to various trade-related resources, such as NGO sites and government positions on trade policy.

See all search results in
Windows Live® Search Results
Page 2 of 2

Harvard University

Encyclopedia Article
Multimedia
Harvard UniversityHarvard University
Article Outline
V

Special Facilities

The Harvard campus is also the site of several renowned museums and collections, among them the Fogg Museum, distinguished for its European and American paintings, sculpture, and prints; the Botanical Museum; and the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology.

Harvard's library system is the oldest in the United States. The central library collection, used for advanced scholarly research, is housed in the Harry Elkins Widener Memorial Library. Augmented by the Houghton Library of rare books and manuscripts, the undergraduate Lamont, Cabot, and Hilles libraries, and the separate house and departmental libraries, as well as by the graduate schools' collections, the complex forms the world's largest university library system. It currently contains more than 12 million volumes, manuscripts, and microfilms.

Outside Cambridge, Harvard University maintains the Arnold Arboretum, in Boston; the Harvard College Observatory, based in Cambridge, but with divisions elsewhere; the research centre for Byzantine and Early Christian studies at Dumbarton Oaks, in Washington, D.C.; and Villa I Tatti in Settignano, Italy, formerly the home and library of the art critic Bernard Berenson and now a centre for art history research.

Home games of the Harvard Crimson American football team and other athletic events take place at Harvard Stadium, which has a seating capacity of more than 38,000. Yale University is Harvard's traditional rival in sports.

VI

Publications

Undergraduate publications include the Harvard Crimson, founded in 1873, a daily newspaper; the Harvard Advocate, a literary review; and a nationally known humorous magazine, the Harvard Lampoon. Among journals issued by Harvard's graduate schools and affiliated groups are the Harvard Business Review, Harvard Educational Review, and the Harvard Law Review. Harvard University Press, founded in 1913, publishes books of scholarly as well as general interest and medical and scientific works.

Reviewed by: Harvard University

Prev.
|
Next
Find in this article
View printer-friendly page
E-mail




© 2008 Microsoft