All articles


  • Arts & Culture

    At 81, her first solo show at home

    With her first solo Boston show on view at the Carpenter Center, Lorraine O’Grady, 81, explains her art and influences during an address at the Harvard Art Museums.

  • Nation & World

    Crossing a line

    Former New York Times Supreme Court reporter Linda Greenhouse spoke at Harvard about the boundaries between journalism and citizenship and why she has crossed that line more than once.

  • Nation & World

    For French scholar, hope survives terror

    The French scholar Patrick Weil visited the Law School to give a talk titled “After the Paris Attacks: What Is the Future for French Society?”

  • Arts & Culture

    The pop in Corita Kent

    A mayoral proclamation, a Harvard Art Museums exhibit, and a StoryCorps project all salute Corita Kent, Boston’s pop art icon.

  • Nation & World

    Reforming criminal justice

    A new program at Harvard Law School aims to help reform the criminal justice system in the United States with assistance from Harvard students and faculty, says executive director Larry Schwartztol.

  • Nation & World

    Religion is changing, fellowship too

    Two Harvard Divinity School students uncover a new sense of community for millennials who choose a different way to “worship.”

  • Campus & Community

    Seeing through others’ eyes

    In a question-and-answer session, Jonathan L. Walton, Plummer Professor of Christian Morals, discusses Harvard College’s approaches to diversity, makes recommendations, and reaffirms the College’s priorities to foster a culture of inclusion.

  • Campus & Community

    Pedro, a pitcher with ‘no space to fail’

    Former Boston Red Sox pitching great Pedro Martinez spoke with Professor Michael Sandel Tuesday about his illustrious 18-year career.

  • Arts & Culture

    Life in a cabaret

    Harvard’s Cabaret, a collaboration between graduate students at the A.R.T. Institute and Harvard undergrads, mixes song, dance, mischief, and monologue.

  • Campus & Community

    Less football than life

    As The Game approaches, Harvard football is looking for success. But coach Tim Murphy is also preparing his graduating seniors for success in life.

  • Science & Tech

    A focus on fairness

    Using a simple game in which candy is distributed between two players, researchers found that children in various countries were quick to reject unfair deals, but in three countries they were also willing to reject deals unfair to others.

  • Science & Tech

    Optimism on U.N. climate talks

    Panelists at the Kennedy School on Monday expressed optimism about the U.N. climate conference set to begin in Paris on Nov. 30, calling U.S. participation on the heels of domestic climate-related moves a “game-changer.”

  • Arts & Culture

    Along China’s keys

    On view at Loeb Music Library through Dec. 18, “One Hundred Years of Chinese Piano Music” sheds light on a robust tradition of song influenced by native folklore, poems, and philosophy, as well as Western compositional techniques.

  • Science & Tech

    The rule-breaker

    Speaking at the JFK Jr. Forum, architect Frank Gehry reflected on half a century of creating surprises.

  • Campus & Community

    Harvard breaks LEED record

    This fall Harvard reached a major milestone in its commitment to sustainability with its 100th LEED certified space. Harvard now has more certified building projects than any other higher education institution in the world, according to the U.S. Green Building Council.

  • Nation & World

    With attacks, ISIS now a global worry

    During a pair of interviews, Harvard Kennedy School analysts weigh in on the deadly and shocking terrorist attacks believed orchestrated by the Islamic State in Paris and Beirut.

  • Campus & Community

    Exploring paths to college

    To bring that dream of opportunity to Boston, Harvard undergrads, local educators, and parents from Allston, Brighton, and Cambridge gathered at the Harvard Ed Portal on Oct. 29 to explore paths to college.

  • Nation & World

    Background on Black Lives Matter

    Four Harvard professors speak about the historical background of the Black Lives Matter movement.

  • Nation & World

    An academic reality show

    Online course ‘PredictionX’ brings together faculty from across the University to discuss the human need to know the future.

  • Nation & World

    A call to build on differences

    Promoting a global society that celebrates both its common humanity and its differences is the antidote to the world’s deepening divisions, the Aga Khan — the worldwide spiritual leader of Shia Ismaili Muslims — said in a visit to Harvard Thursday.

  • Arts & Culture

    Defending disciplines

    Delivering the second Provostial Lecture of the Mahindra Humanities Center at Menschel Hall on Tuesday, University Provost Alan Garber ’76 made a compelling case for the continuation of this tradition, in academia, careers, and beyond.

  • Campus & Community

    Ebola outbreak: A system that failed

    During an Ed Portal discussion, Harvard Professor Ashish Jha examined where the global health system failed when Ebola began to spread.

  • Arts & Culture

    Literary arc

    Radcliffe Fellow Ross Gay is a finalist for the National Book Award in poetry.

  • Campus & Community

    A hub for rowers

    Weld Boathouse is home to the Radcliffe lightweight and heavyweight crews, as well as Harvard’s recreational sculling and intramural House crew programs. It also supports a wide range of fitness programs, including yoga, cycling, and weight training.

  • Arts & Culture

    Art that interrupts

    Artist Shahryar Nashat uses video, sound, and shapes to “intervene” in the space designed by Le Corbusier, while connecting his work with “Private Practice” inside Harvard Art Museums. The goal of the exhibits is to bring together these two gallery spaces as a result of this unique collaboration.

  • Nation & World

    What’s past is prologue

    Celebrated author and journalist Ta-Nehisi Coates discussed how U.S. policy on criminal justice today is still deeply enmeshed with the nation’s fraught racial legacy.

  • Arts & Culture

    Where the orthodox and unorthodox meet

    Harvard’s Elisa New will introduce poet Alicia Jo Rabins, who will read from her book “Divinity School” and play with her band Girls in Trouble on Nov. 16 at Harvard Hillel.

  • Arts & Culture

    Making music that matters

    The Grammy-winning Benin-born singer Angélique Kidjo will bring her passion for music and for giving back to Harvard with two days of lectures and discussions.

  • Campus & Community

    Flier to step down as Medical School dean

    Jeffrey S. Flier will step down as dean of Harvard Medical School next July and return to teaching following a sabbatical year in 2016-17.

  • Health

    The fading of polio

    Faculty and student panel examines efforts to make polio the second human disease to be eradicated during the “Every Last Child” event at Radcliffe.