All articles
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Campus & Community
A Crimson kind of town
Amid a discussion probing inequality, the Your Harvard series celebrates the University’s ties to Chicago.
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Campus & Community
Life under the lights and in the lab
Talented actress and singer Elizabeth Leimkuhler divided her time at Harvard between her love for the stage and her love for all creatures, great and small.
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Campus & Community
Not your average science fair
At the fourth annual School of Engineering and Applied Sciences Design and Project Fair, hundreds of students representing 18 Harvard courses presented projects.
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Health
Leaving a beautiful scar
Feature on surgeon and violinist Terry Buchmiller as part of the Practice series.
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Arts & Culture
Robert Darnton closes the book
A historian, digital library pioneer, and champion of books, Robert Darnton will depart Harvard early this summer, giving up his post as University Librarian to resume a life of full-time scholarship.
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Nation & World
Medal of Honor moment
Three recipients of the nation’s highest military award ― all Vietnam veterans ― toured Harvard’s Memorial Church during a visit on May 8.
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Nation & World
Europe’s calmer side
A Harvard Summer School course will take a novel approach to European history, examining centuries of violence through the lens of peace.
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Science & Tech
Finding problems, designing solutions
The controlled chaos of the fourth annual Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences Design and Project Fair on May 6 offered a taste of the wide range of projects SEAS developed during the school year.
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Health
Improved accuracy in genome editing
A team of scientists has engineered a form of the genome-editing protein Cas9 that can be controlled by a small molecule and offers improved DNA specificity.
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Campus & Community
Scholarship of things
Addressing an audience at the Harvard Ed Portal, Laurel Thatcher Ulrich, the 300th Anniversary University Professor and a Pulitzer Prize winner for history, said that many objects in Harvard’s collections defy easy categorization. Consider, she said, the tortilla.
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Science & Tech
Saving the digital record
Changing with the times as the world moves from paper to digital, the Harvard Library has adopted forensic techniques to save material stored on obsolete formats.
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Nation & World
The modern Buddhist minister
The conference “Education and Buddhist Ministry: Whither — and Why?” was held at the Harvard Divinity School and marked a new undertaking for its Buddhist Ministry Initiative.
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Campus & Community
Great adventures
Students in “The Humanities Colloquium: Essential Works 2” received an education both in and out of the classroom.
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Science & Tech
The era of climate responsibility
At Harvard’s 10th annual Plant Biology Symposium, climate expert Chris Field talked about the need to evaluate environmental risks in the coming decades even as many people work to reduce climate-warming emissions.
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Health
Creatures of habit
The motor cortex is critical to learn new skills, but may not be needed to perform them, a new Harvard study says.
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Arts & Culture
Saving the elephants
Author chronicles how a system in which Myanmar’s elephants were made half-captive likely has ensured their survival.
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Arts & Culture
The roots of artistry
A clever exhibit at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, designed by Graduate School of Design Professor Rosetta Elkin, is bringing organic beauty out of the shadows. Her installation highlights the root system of a white poplar.
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Campus & Community
‘A completely new life was beckoning’
Interview with Gerald Holton as part of the Experience series.
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Arts & Culture
Walt Whitman’s war
A Harvard panel assesses Walt Whitman’s vivid and pictorial ‘Drum-Taps,’ a collection of Civil War poems out in print for the first time in 150 years. Professor Elisa New will explore “Drum-Taps” (along with Melville’s war poems) in a new HarvardX online American poetry course, which launches May 8.
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Arts & Culture
Making medieval German sing
Professor Racha Kirakosian is using performance to help her students grasp gender issues in medieval German literature.
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Health
‘New clarity’ against Alzheimer’s
Rudolph Tanzi of Harvard Medical School, recently named to Time’s list of the most influential people in the world, talks about the promising future of Alzheimer’s research.
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Nation & World
‘Destruction across the city’
Lara Phillips, a Harvard Medical School instructor in emergency medicine, was in Nepal during the April 25 earthquake that devastated Kathmandu and other areas. She and colleagues have traveled from the high-mountain clinic where they worked to offer assistance.
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Health
Meditation may relieve IBS and IBD
A small pilot study by Harvard-affiliated researchers finds symptom improvement and changes in expression of inflammation-associated genes in irritable bowel syndrome and inflammatory bowel disease patients who practice the relaxation response.
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Campus & Community
Harvard faculty elected to NAS
Seven Harvard faculty members were elected to the National Academy of Sciences.
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Nation & World
The women who questioned Wall Street
A trio of Wall Street’s toughest critics talks about gender and taking on what’s been called America’s ultimate boys’ club.