All articles


  • Nation & World

    The right footprints

    Gabrielle Scrimshaw ’18 is a Gleitsman Fellow at the Harvard Kennedy School. The first in her family to attend college, she plans to start an investment firm for tribal businesses and indigenous entrepreneurs.

    Gabrielle Scrimshaw, Gleitsman Fellow at the Harvard Kennedy School
  • Nation & World

    Paramedic to Prague to Harvard

    Oren Varnai, graduating from the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health’s mid-career master of public health program, is a Foreign Service officer in Prague.

  • Campus & Community

    Bear away the bell

    For the 30th consecutive year, neighboring churches and institutions will ring their bells at the conclusion of Harvard’s 367th Commencement Exercises.

  • Campus & Community

    Expanding support for leading research

    A gift from Josh Friedman ’76, M.B.A. ’80, J.D. ’82, and Beth Friedman, longstanding benefactors of the University, will double the resources available for high-risk, high-reward science, allowing more of the most ambitious research projects at Harvard to move forward.

  • Campus & Community

    Rewarding remarkable studies

    The annual awards created through a gift from James A. Star ’83 fund research unlikely to be funded through other programs — risky studies with the potential to contribute to radical new understandings of our world.

  • Campus & Community

    Two named to lead Overseers

    Susan L. Carney, a federal appeals court judge, has been elected president of Harvard University’s Board of Overseers. Gwill E. York, co-founder and managing director of Lighthouse Capital Partners, will be vice chair.

  • Campus & Community

    Alumni presented with Harvard Medal on Commencement

    At the annual meeting of the Harvard Alumni Association on Commencement Day, President Drew Faust will present the 2018 Harvard Medal to Robert Coles ’50, Robert N. Shapiro ’72, J.D. ’78, and Alice “Acey” Welch ’53 in recognition of their service to the University.

  • Campus & Community

    From heart-sick and road-weary to Harvard

    After James Venable graduates in May with his bachelor’s degree, he heads to Yale Divinity School to work on a master’s degree in divinity, with plans to return to Harvard for a master’s in theological studies, and go on to Princeton for a doctorate in African-American religion.

    James Venable
  • Health

    Food for thought on new ideas

    At Harvard-backed “Guppy Tank” sessions, proposals for a new diet that restricts proteins and essential amino acids instead of calories and nutritional supplements to counteract the negative effects of sleep deprivation got feedback from the pros.

  • Health

    No bones about it

    “There is a perception that you need to be big and strong to be an orthopaedic surgeon. I like to think it’s more about being smart and thoughtful and using finesse rather than brawn.”

    Blake Hauser (drilling) and Julia Gelissen practicing drilling and inserting intramedullary nail on sawbones model.
  • Health

    Moving beyond the scientific nudge

    In a study published in Nature Human Behavior, Harvard’s Michèle Lamont argues that if researchers want to capture a fuller picture of human behavior, they need a new approach that bridges the gap between sociology and cognitive psychology.

  • Campus & Community

    Engaging alumni globally and personally

    As Susan Morris Novick ’85 concludes her tenure as Harvard Alumni Association (HAA) president, she is optimistic about the future of the HAA as she prepares to hand the reins to her successor, Margaret Wang ’09.

    Margaret Wang ’09 (left) will succeed Susan Morris Novick ’85
  • Nation & World

    The Civil Rights lawyer who paved the path

    On the anniversary of Brown v. Board of Education, the Gazette sat down with Tomiko Brown-Nagin, the faculty director of the Charles Hamilton Houston Institute for Race & Justice, to talk about Houston, architect of the legal campaign that led to the 1954 landmark Supreme Court ruling that ended legal segregation in public schools.

    Tomiko Brown-Nagin.
  • Science & Tech

    CRISPR’s breakthrough implications

    CRISPR pioneer Jennifer Doudna discussed the gene-editing technology’s rapid spread and the need for a robust discussion about the ethics of its applications.

  • Health

    Enzyme interference

    Researchers discovered that Eggerthella lenta — a bacterium found in the guts of more than 30 percent of the population — can metabolize the cardiac drug digoxin in high enough quantities to render it ineffective. Now, a team of researchers has identified the culprit gene that produces the digoxin-metabolizing enzyme.

  • Campus & Community

    ‘I was confused and inspired. I wanted to do everything’

    The first woman to earn tenure at the GSD and the first to chair the department of architecture has made a career of making statements.

    Toshiko Mori.
  • Health

    A master’s degree that’s more than something to sing about

    Already the master of 10 instruments and four languages, Jeniris González-Alverio, 29, wanted to earn a degree from the Graduate School of Education that she could use to help children and adults recover from injuries and overcome disabilities.

  • Campus & Community

    82% of those admitted will join Class of ’22

    So far 82 percent of the students admitted to the Class of 2022 have notified Harvard they will matriculate to campus this August.

  • Health

    Environmental medicine brings climate change to forefront

    During a panel discussion at Harvard Medical School, members of Students for Environmental Awareness in Medicine gave the physicians’ perspective on how environmental issues will impact human health.

  • Work & Economy

    Unleash your inner rebel

    Harvard Business School Professor Francesca Gino talks about what she learned from the talented rebels she’s worked with during her research over the years, and what they have to teach us about when to break the rules.

  • Nation & World

    The doctor gets a doctorate

    Neither Wirun Limsawart’s knowledge as a doctor nor his work as a hospital manager could help him solve Thailand’s national crisis over health care malpractice.

  • Campus & Community

    The road ahead for Title IX efforts

    Though Harvard has been working to reduce sexual and gender harassment for years, it’s adding to its Title IX efforts.

  • Nation & World

    Time off from Harvard helped her thrive

    Jee always knew she would take time off from her studies. What she didn’t know was how her time away from Cambridge would help her “fall back in love with Harvard,” and define her future path.

  • Health

    Beam Therapeutics receives Harvard license

    Harvard University has granted a worldwide license to Beam Therapeutics Inc. to develop and commercialize a suite of revolutionary DNA base editing technologies for treating human disease.

    David Liu
  • Campus & Community

    A revolution, 50 years in the making

    The return of members of the Harvard and Radcliffe Class of 1968 for the 50th anniversary of their graduation proves cause to revisit an era of sweeping change.

    Case from "Harvard, 1968" exhibit.
  • Arts & Culture

    An opportunist looking to learn

    Occasionem discere a quovis — “every moment a learning opportunity” — is what Theodore Delwiche ’18 discovered through the Radcliffe Institute Research Partnership Program.

    Theodore Delwiche ’18
  • Nation & World

    Her app for a socio-medical goal: Anthropology without borders

    Margot Mai ’18 came to Harvard to pursue biology and pre-med, only to discover anthropology and change her concentration in her sophomore year.

  • Campus & Community

    ‘The greatest gift you can have is a good education, one that isn’t strictly professional’

    The professor who put forward the idea of multiple intelligences talks about his adventures in learning for the Experience series.

    Howard Gardner in his office.
  • Nation & World

    Assessing the Iran deal pullout

    Faculty and affiliates of the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs at Harvard Kennedy School weighed in on President Donald Trump’s decision to pull out the United States from the multi-lateral Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, the Iran nuclear deal.

    President Trump at podium.
  • Campus & Community

    A whole-family approach

    A Q&A with Fletcher Maynard Academy principal Robin Harris on the impact of Harvard’s “Mind Matters” program at the Cambridge school.