All articles


  • Campus & Community

    International Committee of the Red Cross president honored

    Peter Maurer, president of the International Committee of the Red Cross, will receive the inaugural Elisabeth B. Weintz Humanitarian Award on March 29 at the Harvard Art Museums. Earlier that day, he will deliver a Director’s Seminar at the Minda de Gunzburg Center for European Studies at Harvard. On March 30, he will speak at…

  • Health

    Strength in love, hope in science

    Husband and wife Eric Minikel and Sonia Vallabh have found a home at the Broad Institute to work toward a treatment for her fatal disease.

  • Nation & World

    To speak, and move others to act

    Language, literature, and the liberal arts are key disciplines in forming leaders, Harvard President Drew Faust said during a speech at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point.

  • Campus & Community

    Pinning their hopes on buttons

    Catchy slogans, iconic symbols, and striking colors are the makings for memorable political buttons.

    Lyndon B. Johnson 1964 campaign button.
  • Nation & World

    A ‘new phase’ of global terrorism

    U.S. Secretary of Homeland Security Jeh C. Johnson spoke to students at Harvard Kennedy School about the complex efforts that go into national security, particularly in the wake of terrorist attacks.

  • Nation & World

    At the intersection of sexuality and spirituality

    From pastor to corporate lawyer to divinity school student, Danny Ballon has learned that you don’t have to choose between being gay and being Christian. Now he wants to help others understand their options.

  • Arts & Culture

    Searching for paradise

    Chilean poet Raúl Zurita will deliver a bilingual reading as the Robert F. Kennedy Visiting Professor in Latin American Studies.

  • Nation & World

    The making of two educators

    Harvard University President Drew Gilpin Faust and her brother, Donald Gilpin, a retired English and drama teacher, shared their thoughts on pedagogy in a discussion at the Harvard Graduate School of Education.

  • Arts & Culture

    ‘The Global Philosopher’

    Harvard Business School (HBS) and BBC Radio 4 have worked together to produce the first episode of “The Global Philosopher,” a program hosted by Harvard political philosopher Michael J. Sandel.

  • Science & Tech

    Warmer weather, finer wines

    By examining more than 500 years of harvest records, researchers found that wine grape harvests across France, on average, now occur two weeks earlier than in the past, largely due to climate change. While earlier harvests are normally associated with higher quality wines, researchers caution the trend likely won’t last.

  • Campus & Community

    The costs of inequality: Across Harvard, efforts to improve lives

    Harvard offers myriad programs to alleviate the inequality gap within the University, from neighboring communities to overseas.

  • Arts & Culture

    ‘Average’ gets his ire up

    Todd Rose, lecturer in education, debunks the myth of the “typical” learner in his new book, “The End of Average.”

  • Health

    Collaboration to develop cancer therapeutics

    The Blavatnik Biomedical Accelerator will collaborate with Merck to develop small-molecule therapy for the most common form of acute leukemia.

  • Science & Tech

    Big gains in better chewing

    According to a new Harvard study, our ancestors between 2 and 3 million years ago started to spend far less time and effort chewing by adding meat to their diets and using stone tools to process food.

  • Nation & World

    Obama in Havana

    President Barack Obama will be the first sitting U.S. president to visit Cuba since Calvin Coolidge traveled there in 1928. Harvard scholars spoke about the trip’s symbolism in the efforts to re-establish diplomatic relations with Cuba.

  • Campus & Community

    Professors get personal about their own career paths

    Faculty in the arts and humanities meet with students over dinner at the Office of Career Services to share their personal experiences and paths to success.

  • Campus & Community

    Boston approves Harvard’s Life Lab

    The Boston Redevelopment Authority gave final approval Thursday to Harvard University’s Life Lab in Allston, which is scheduled to open this fall. As part of the Harvard Innovation Labs, the Life Lab will offer shared laboratory space for high-potential life sciences and biotech startups established by Harvard faculty, alumni, students, and postdoctoral scholars.

  • Health

    Real as a heart attack, almost

    “Standardized patients” are trained actors who role-play the sort of diagnostic puzzles regularly faced by practicing physicians. They interact with students at the Tosteson Medical Education Center at Harvard Medical School (HMS).

  • Campus & Community

    Race to the top

    Harvard Track and Field put their best foot forward at the Crimson Elite meet on Feb. 6, with the men topping the opposition and the women finishing second out of 10 teams.

  • Nation & World

    Ireland at the breaking point

    Nearly everybody in the Boston area knows that March 17 is the feast day of Patrick, patron saint of Ireland. Perhaps fewer are aware that in 10 days’ time, the Republic of Ireland will celebrate its 100th anniversary as an independent nation. Professor Catherine McKenna guided the Gazette through the struggle behind that independence.

  • Nation & World

    Justice in moderation

    In a question-and-answer session, Harvard Law School Professor Laurence Tribe explains how Merrick Garland’s long service as a U.S. appeals court judge makes him a well-vetted candidate for the U.S. Supreme Court.

  • Arts & Culture

    Jazz made visible

    “The Art of Jazz: Form/Performance/Notes” explores the interaction between jazz and the visual arts.

  • Health

    Alcohol and heart risk, by the minute

    A study by researchers at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health shows that moderate alcohol consumption can produce a temporary increase in heart attack and stroke risk.

  • Campus & Community

    Ice in their veins

    This year, Harvard hockey coach Ted Donato ’91 is coaching his son, freshman forward — and future Bruin — Ryan Donato.

  • Campus & Community

    Harvard Law School to retire shield

    The Harvard Corporation has approved Harvard Law School’s recommendation to retire its shield, which includes part of the crest of a slaveholding family that helped to establish the School.

  • Nation & World

    The costs of inequality: Faster lives, quicker deaths

    For African Americans and Hispanics, damaged neighborhoods undercut education, health, jobs — the keys to overcoming inequality and succeeding.

    Illustration of white businessman catching a dollar and colleagues of color catching coins.
  • Nation & World

    Working, with children

    While there is greater support for gender equality today, how it’s defined and how greatly it’s supported remains in flux, a panel of sociologists found.

  • Science & Tech

    3-D material changes shape as it prepares for next task

    Harvard researchers have designed a new type of foldable material that is versatile, tunable, and self-actuated. It can change size, volume, and shape; it can fold flat to withstand the weight of an elephant without breaking, and pop right back up to prepare for the next task.

  • Campus & Community

    Faust, Walsh honor local nonprofits

    Boston Mayor Martin J. Walsh joined Harvard President Drew Faust at the Harvard Ed Portal in Allston on Thursday to honor the latest Harvard Allston Partnership Fund (HAPF) grant recipients. Grants totaling $100,000 were awarded to 12 local nonprofits that support programs in the Allston-Brighton community.

  • Nation & World

    Home today, gone tomorrow

    Harvard sociologist Matthew Desmond followed eight Milwaukee families living on the edge of eviction and chronicled their struggles in an ethnographic study that combines gripping narrative and groundbreaking research.