All articles


  • Campus & Community

    Focusing on people and place

    Alice Hill will be the first Australian and the first Canadian to lead the HAA, as well as the first from the Asia Pacific region. She plans to bring those perspectives to the table as president.

  • Campus & Community

    Best in high gear

    While she was earning a master’s at HGSE, Nicole Johnson worked four jobs, was vice president of the HGSE Student Council, and won the Miss Massachusetts International Pageant.

    Nicole Johnson was just crowned Miss Massachusetts International.
  • Campus & Community

    Inviting the community into design, decisions

    In England, Rhodes Scholar Brittany Ellis will continue to promote collaboration between museums and communities in curatorial decision-making.

    Brittany Ellis '19 at the Peabody Museum
  • Campus & Community

    Searching for answers in what lemurs leave behind

    Harvard College senior Camille DeSisto’s love of the environment took her around the world to Madagascar’s tropical forests.

    Harvard College graduate Camille DeSisto
  • Arts & Culture

    A revolutionary musical

    Brothers Daniel and Patrick Lazour’s musical, “We Live in Cairo,” brings the immediacy of Egypt’s January 25 Revolution to the American Repertory Theater on May 14.

    cast of We Live in Cairo
  • Health

    Catch a virus by the tail

    Scientists uncover a key mechanism that allows some of the deadliest human RNA viruses to replicate, and it resides in the tail end of the viruses. The findings identify new targets to inhibit viral replication and may inform the development of a new class of antiviral drugs.

    Influenza virus
  • Health

    Tackling high Rx prices

    The HarvardX online platform is offering a free course on the FDA and prescription drug prices. Three faculty members behind the course discuss the issues.

    four people talking outside the Harvard Ed Portal building
  • Campus & Community

    A worm named Peanut

    Kindergarten through fifth grade Boston Public School students become “Young Scientists” for a day through the Arnold Arboretum’s Field Study Experiences program.

    children lying on the grass
  • Nation & World

    Unpacking the power of poverty

    Social scientists have long understood that a child’s environment can have long-lasting effects on their success later in life. Exactly how is less well understood. A new Harvard study points to a handful of key indicators, including exposure to high lead levels, violence, and incarceration, as key predictors of children’s later success.

    Professor Robert Sampson
  • Campus & Community

    Mistaken identities

    Both graduating this May, the two Cat Zhangs weigh in on four years of being confused with each other and the respective legacies they leave behind.

    Cat L. Zhang former president of UC, on right, and Cat Y. Zhang
  • Campus & Community

    Theater stages and thesis pages

    La’Toya Princess Jackson’s thesis, “Black Swans Shattering the Glass Ceiling,” focuses on African American contributions to ballet.

    La'Toya sitting on a piano
  • Campus & Community

    Lab success, life goals

    Dalton Brunson’s biology studies have led him to labs, research, and successes that he hopes keep him ever mindful of his commitment to expanding health care in rural areas.

    Dalton Brunson in an office
  • Health

    Broccoli and Brussels sprouts: Cancer foes

    Broccoli, Brussels sprouts and other cruciferous vegetables have long been thought to be good for you, new research finds a mechanism for its cancer-fighting abilities and points the way to a new anti-cancer drug.

    researcher in the lab
  • Campus & Community

    Exhibit charts history of Apollo 11 moon mission

    A new Houghton Library exhibit connects early celestial calculations to the Apollo 11 mission that put two American astronauts on the lunar surface 50 years ago. “Small Steps, Giant Leaps: Apollo 11 at Fifty” offers gems from Harvard’s collection of rare books and manuscripts as well as NASA items that were aboard the spaceship in…

    Buzz Aldrin on the moon with Neil Armstrong reflected in his visor.
  • Campus & Community

    A plaque recalls aid in escaping from Nazis

    Harvard re-installs plaque honoring students from the late 1930s who started a scholarship that helped 16 European refugees flee Nazi persecution and study at Harvard.

    Two men examine plaque in Harvard Yard.
  • Arts & Culture

    Armchair travels with a purpose

    Digital Giza Project lets scholars virtually visit sites in Egypt and beyond and, even print them in 3-D.

    Students wearing 3D glasses view a visualization of an Egyptian tomb.
  • Campus & Community

    Schuyler Bailar races toward his authentic self

    Schuyler Bailar ’19 is the first openly transgender swimmer in the National Collegiate Athletic Association and a member of the Harvard men’s swimming team.

    Schuyler Bailar '19 in a swimming start pose
  • Campus & Community

    Mentors make the difference

    Over seven years, Professor of Education Roberto Gonzales interviewed thousands of undocumented young people who qualified for deferred action from deportation under DACA, and found that for high achievers among them, community and family mentors made the difference.

    Roberto Gonzales gives presentation at podium.
  • Campus & Community

    ‘No longer a guest, no longer an outsider, no longer a spectator’

    At a naturalization ceremony at the Harvard Kennedy School, 43 men and women became American citizens.

    two women pledging during a citizenship ceremony
  • Nation & World

    Amid India elections, Harvard study aligns data with constituencies

    A team at the Center for Population and Development Studies and the Center for Geographic Analysis has remapped a trove of health and wellness data to align it with political districts in India, to help voters in the world’s largest democracy better decide how to vote in the six-week election.

    S.V. Subramanian.
  • Campus & Community

    Tired of winning? Not a chance

    In the past five years, the women’s squash team has racked up five straight national championships, four Ivy League titles, and three individual national championships, all while maintaining a 65-match unbeaten streak.

    Eleonore Evans at squash practice.
  • Health

    Pharma-to-doc marketing a vulnerability in opioid fight

    A University of Michigan-Harvard University summit brought experts from the two universities as well as outside organizations to consider ways to address the opioid epidemic.

    Pills spilling from a bottle
  • Nation & World

    Bacow stresses educational, civic partnerships

    Harvard President Larry Bacow met with Phoenix Mayor Kate Gallego ’04 and city manager Ed Zuercher during a trip to Phoenix to discuss the partnership between Harvard and the city that began in 2017, as part of the Bloomberg Harvard City Leadership Initiative. He also visited Houston.

    Larry Bacow shakes hands with Phoenix mayor
  • Campus & Community

    Songwriter carries more than one tune

    Nima Samimi, recipient of a degree in Middle Eastern Studies, is a jack of all trades and a master of at least a few, including academics, music, and social justice.

    Samimi standing near a tree
  • Nation & World

    Intelligence matters

    Former intelligence officers, lawmakers, national security analysts, and top journalists discussed some of the ethical and moral issues in intelligence work and looked at the current challenges facing those in the field during a conference this week hosted by the Intelligence Project, a program of the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs at the…

    two people speaking on a panel
  • Arts & Culture

    ‘Pride and Prejudice’ coming to Arnold Arboretum

    In June, Harvard’s Arnold Arboretum will host an Actors’ Shakespeare Project production of Jane Austen’s “Pride and Prejudice,” adapted by Kate Hamill, in the Leventritt Shrub and Vine Garden.

  • Campus & Community

    A long road, well chronicled

    Denise-Marie Ordway, with a large family and impressive resumé, excels as Nieman Fellow, HGSE master’s candidate

    Denise-Marie Ordway
  • Health

    Mini-gut reaction

    Researchers at Massachusetts General Hospital have created miniature, simplified versions of the intestine in vitro to explore how the gut lining and microbiome respond to gluten in both healthy and celiac patients.

    Bread
  • Campus & Community

    Strong yield for the Class of 2023

    Nearly 83 percent of students admitted to the Class of 2023 have chosen to matriculate at Harvard College. Here’s their demographic breakdown.

    One of Harvard's many ornate gates.
  • Campus & Community

    James Allan Davis, 86

    At a Meeting of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences on May 7, 2019, the Minute honoring the life and service of the late James Allan Davis, Professor of Sociology, Emeritus, was placed upon the records. Professor Davis devoted himself to building empirical foundations for social science, especially in survey and public opinion research.