All articles


  • Campus & Community

    Accolade for Stone Hall

    Revitalized Stone Hall wins platinum level LEED certification. The project was also honored by the Cambridge Historical Commission as part of its annual Preservation Awards Program for the extraordinary efforts undertaken to conserve and protect Cambridge’s historic architecture.

  • Campus & Community

    Diversity dialogue

    Panelists discuss how to make inclusion a central part of workplace culture.

  • Health

    Ebola genomes sequenced

    A team of researchers from the Broad Institute, Harvard University, and elsewhere has sequenced and analyzed dozens of Ebola virus genomes in the present outbreak. Their findings could have important implications for rapid field diagnostic tests.

  • Campus & Community

    FAS seeks community input

    The Gazette recently sat down with Professor Alison Johnson to discuss her committee, which is charged with examining issues of sexual misconduct and other forms of gender discrimination for Harvard College and the rest of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences.

  • Campus & Community

    Goodbye parents, hello Yard!

    Parents’ emotions range from joy to wistfulness as Harvard students part from them to begin the new school year.

  • Health

    Erasing traumatic memories

    Researchers at Harvard-affiliated McLean Hospital are reporting that xenon gas, used in humans for anesthesia and diagnostic imaging, has the potential to be a treatment for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and other memory-related disorders

  • Health

    Of books, trees, and knowledge

    In the Hunnewell Building is the Arnold Arboretum Horticultural Library, whose books, papers, and photographs ― stored near living collections of many of the same plants they describe ― draw scholars from around the world.

  • Arts & Culture

    Lost voices of 1953

    Harvard’s Woodberry Poetry Room uncovered forgotten audio from a 1953 conference on the novel, including the confident voice of the newly famous Ralph Ellison.

  • Campus & Community

    Goldie takes new post

    Sue J. Goldie, the founding faculty director of the Harvard Global Health Institute, will become director of the new Global Health Education and Learning Incubator at Harvard University, and special adviser to the provost on global health education and learning.

  • Campus & Community

    Composting program grows in the Yard

    To create a more sustainable campus, the College will implement composting in all freshman dormitories.

  • Campus & Community

    Settling in

    The members of Harvard’s Class of 2018 arrive and move into their dorms, where they are welcomed by University leaders.

  • Campus & Community

    Engage, enjoy, get centered

    As freshmen move into dorms in and around the Yard, fellow students, faculty, and administrators offer tips on how best to adjust to the Harvard experience, from maintaining basic wellness to exploring the vast resources Harvard has to offer.

  • Nation & World

    The fumbles in Ferguson

    Crisis management expert Herman “Dutch” Leonard talks about how the confrontation in Ferguson, Mo., was mishandled.

  • Nation & World

    Running the show

    Newly elected the next commissioner of Major League Baseball, Harvard Law School grad Rob Manfred talks about the future of the game.

  • Health

    When cooperation counts

    A new study conducted by Harvard scientists shows that in deer mice, a species known to be highly promiscuous, sperm clump together to swim in a more linear fashion, increasing their chances of fertilization.

  • Science & Tech

    Are failing bees our warning sign?

    Harvard School of Public Health Associate Professor of Environmental Exposure Biology Chengsheng (Alex) Lu outlines the danger posed to our food supply — and possibly to us — by the collapse of honeybee colonies.

  • Campus & Community

    Experience for a lifetime

    This summer, 51 local high school students and recent graduates spent the school break working in various departments across Harvard’s Cambridge and Allston campuses as part of the Summer Youth Employment Program.

  • Science & Tech

    Fighting unfairness

    A new study by Harvard scientists suggests that, from a young age, children are biased in favor of their own social groups when they intervene in what they believe are unfair situations. But as they get older, they can learn to become more impartial.

  • Nation & World

    Targeting teacher tenure

    HGSE economist Tom Kane explains the issues behind the debate over tenure policies for public school teachers in New York and California.

  • Campus & Community

    Scholarships make summer camp possible

    The Harvard Allston Education Portal provides camp scholarships to young residents of Allston and Brighton over the summer. This year a soccer school and a swimming and tennis academy were among the camp offerings.

  • Health

    Fewer clinics, less care

    The protective gear needed to get Sierra Leone’s health clinics reopened, coupled with public education about the Ebola epidemic, are the greatest areas of need, according to a Harvard Fulbright Fellow and physician from Sierra Leone.

  • Campus & Community

    Nicolau Sevcenko dies at 61

    Harvard Professor of Romance Languages and Literatures Nicolau Sevcenko died on Aug. 13 at his home in São Paulo. He was 61.

  • Health

    Sense of scents

    A new study sheds light on the extent to which animals can make distinctions among scents.

  • Nation & World

    Getting a handle on inversion

    Mihir Desai spoke with the Gazette about the controversy surrounding tax inversion.

  • Science & Tech

    The 1,000-robot swarm

    Harvard researchers create a swarm of 1,000 tiny robots that, upon command, can autonomously combine to form requested shapes — a significant advance in artificial intelligence.

  • Campus & Community

    Classrooms without walls

    Summer camps run by the Phillips Brooks House Association are making a difference for youths across Boston and Cambridge.

  • Campus & Community

    Hugh Calkins, former Overseer, Corporation member

    Hugh Calkins, an alumnus of Harvard College and Harvard Law School and a longtime member of the Harvard Corporation and Board of Overseers, passed away on Aug. 4.

  • Health

    Understanding Ebola

    Though the threat to the U.S. population from the Ebola outbreak in West Africa is low, the need in epidemic countries is great, says Michael VanRooyen, director of the Harvard Humanitarian Initiative.

  • Campus & Community

    Constructive summer

    Harvard’s Summer School offers students young and old access to the University’s archives, museums, and libraries, as well as more than 300 courses.

  • Health

    Drug delivery system prevents transplant rejection

    In pre-clinical studies conducted by the researchers, a one-time, local injection of the hydrogel-drug combo prevented graft rejection for more than 100 days. This compared with 35.5 days for recipients receiving only tacrolimus, and 11 days for recipients without treatment or only receiving hydrogel.