All articles


  • Arts & Culture

    Studying the Civil War, finding shared values

    High school students grapple with national issues by collaborating about Civil War themes to develop a new type of theater experience.

  • Arts & Culture

    Every stitch of Hitch

    In a summer retrospective, the Harvard Film Archive is presenting all of Alfred Hitchcock’s feature films and nine of his silent movies. Starting July 11, the series runs through Sept. 28.

  • Campus & Community

    Pfister named interim dean

    Donald Pfister, Asa Gray Professor of Systematic Botany and dean of the Harvard Summer School, has been appointed interim dean of Harvard College. Pfister’s career at Harvard spans nearly 40 years.

  • Science & Tech

    Designing a cleaner future

    A slum on the outskirts of Accra, Ghana, received major media attention when the world realized it’s where computers go to die. That was when Harvard undergraduate Rachel Field ’12 devoted her senior thesis project to addressing the problem. Her solution was an award-winner.

  • Campus & Community

    Feast your eyes

    Shoppers share their ideas and recipes for making the best usage of fresh summer ingredients purchased at the Harvard Farmers’ Market.

  • Campus & Community

    A globe-trotter, by design

    School of Engineering and Applied Sciences graduate William Marks departs Harvard with a hat trick of achievements: a Fulbright Scholarship, a Gates Cambridge Scholarship at Cambridge University in England, and an offer of admission to Harvard Business School’s 2+2 M.B.A. program.

  • Campus & Community

    Connell family donates $10M to HBS

    The family of the late William F. Connell, M.B.A. ’63, has donated an additional $10 million to Harvard Business School (HBS) to establish the Margot and William F. Connell Family MBA Program Innovation Fund.

  • Campus & Community

    A Harvard crossroads in summer

    The reconstructed Science Center Plaza has become a warm-weather gathering spot, complete with food trucks, and more improvements are on the way.

  • Campus & Community

    Collaborative museums

    Harvard Museums of Science & Culture, the new public face of the FAS science museums, has enjoyed a successful first year with new programs and exhibits and a record number of visitors.

  • Campus & Community

    In pursuit of science

    Educational partnerships between Harvard and Cambridge public schools are bringing the theoretical to life, including at the middle school level.

  • Arts & Culture

    Time for a movie

    A Harvard summer film series explores the tick and tock of time, and time travel too. Upcoming films include “Run Lola Run” on July 16, “Memento” on July 30, and “Primer” on Aug. 13. All films are shown at 7 p.m., Science Center Lecture Hall C.

  • Campus & Community

    University opens Social Alternative Fund

    Harvard University today activated its new Social Alternative Fund, an option for donors who give special consideration to social responsibility issues when making investments. More information about the fund can…

  • Arts & Culture

    Our signature 1776 revolutionary

    Founding Father and patriot John Hancock, he of the famous signature, was also famed in his day as the Harvard treasurer who left town while managing the College funds — and returned them two years later.

  • Arts & Culture

    Journalism, cinema-style

    A new summer film series on journalism opens with a documentary that asks: Will print, and original news reporting, survive the digital avalanche? “Meet John Doe,” presented by James Geary, Nieman ’12, will be shown July 9.

  • Science & Tech

    Avoiding the digital ‘flock’

    In his new book, “Rewire,” former Berkman Fellow Ethan Zuckerman challenges the digital world to connect with others, using tools to overcome people’s “flocking” instincts.

  • Campus & Community

    Watching Spanish grow

    The Instituto Cervantes Observatory of the Spanish Language and Hispanic Cultures in the United States at the Faculty of Arts and Sciences of Harvard University will be a center for tracking Spanish language growth.

  • Science & Tech

    Right down the middle, explained

    The ability to throw an object with great speed and accuracy is a uniquely human adaptation, one that Harvard researchers say played a key role in our evolution.

  • Campus & Community

    Coach for the ages

    Legendary crew coach Harry Parker, who joined Harvard in 1960 and helmed the Crimson’s heavyweight program starting 50 years ago, died June 25. He was 77 and had mentored generations of Harvard rowers and U.S. Olympians.

  • Campus & Community

    Remembering Harry Parker

    On June 25, 2013, the world of rowing lost a legend. Please share your reflections below.

  • Campus & Community

    Statement on passing of Harry Parker

    Statement on passing of Harry Parker, The Thomas Bolles Head Coach for Harvard Men’s Heavyweight Crew, by Jack Reardon, AB’60, Executive Director, Harvard Alumni Association and Harvard University Athletic Director 1977-1990.

  • Nation & World

    Tracking a cultural shift

    Harvard experts examine high court rulings, as well as the political, cultural, and social factors that have ushered in a wave of support for marriage equality.

  • Campus & Community

    A beacon of community

    Harvard, Boston, and community and federal officials attended a ribbon-cutting ceremony in Allston for the new Charlesview Apartments at Brighton Mills, an unusual partnership that proved an exercise in teamwork.

  • Science & Tech

    Map to renewable energy?

    Researchers hoping to make the next breakthrough in renewable energy now have plenty of new avenues to explore — Harvard researchers this week released a database of more than 2 million molecules that might be useful in the construction of organic solar cells for the production of renewable energy.

  • Campus & Community

    Down home

    House life is a vibrant experience in which undergraduates learn from and mingle with other students, tutors, House masters — and their families — from sophomore year until graduation. A glimpse inside as seen through the photographers’ lens.

  • Nation & World

    Affirmative action policies remain

    The U.S. Supreme Court returned the question of affirmative action in college admissions to the lower courts for reconsideration.

  • Health

    A learning gap is filled with plants

    With classes in plant morphology fading in universities across the country, an Arnold Arboretum short course is seeking to plug the hole, bringing in top botany graduate students and postdoctoral fellows for an intensive, two-week course.

  • Campus & Community

    A goodbye and hello

    Elected officials, Harvard leaders, and community members celebrated and lauded departing Cambridge City Manager Robert Healy, who will become a fellow at the Kennedy School.

  • Campus & Community

    Jesse Berlin to receive Lagakos Award

    The Harvard Department of Biostatistics has announced that Jesse Berlin will be this year’s recipient of the annual Lagakos Distinguished Alumni Award.

  • Health

    Following the swarm

    Australian scientist Stephen Simpson’s locust research has led to insights on human nutrition.

  • Arts & Culture

    Sandel in Central Park

    During an evening in Central Park, germane readings from Shakespeare’s plays were followed by a forum led by Professor Michael Sandel, whose book “What Money Can’t Buy: The Moral Limit of Markets” examined the social repercussions of letting so many life choices come with a price tag.