All articles


  • Campus & Community

    My House | From My House to Our Harvard

    Houses are at the heart of a Harvard College education. From My House to Our Harvard | 2012 FAS Film

  • Campus & Community

    Homework | From My House to Our Harvard

    At Harvard, homework assignments can save lives. From My House to Our Harvard | 2012 FAS Film

  • Campus & Community

    Our Harvard | From My House to Our Harvard

    Harvard is distinct for more reasons than you can count. From My House to Our Harvard | 2012 FAS Film

  • Campus & Community

    Hopi and Niroshi | From My House to Our Harvard

    Harvard faculty encourage creative learning by helping students develop one-of-a-kind courses and concentrations. From My House to Our Harvard | 2012 FAS Film

  • Campus & Community

    A Little Idea | From My House to Our Harvard

    Harvard students turn little ideas into big solutions every day. From My House to Our Harvard | 2012 FAS Film

  • Campus & Community

    Our Student-Athletes | From My House to Our Harvard

    Harvard’s student-athletes represent excellence, on and off the field. From My House to Our Harvard | 2012 FAS Film

  • Campus & Community

    Linking health policy to people

    Maia Fedyszyn, who is receiving a master’s of science in public health from the Harvard School of Public Health, has a passion for health policy to improve the lot of everyday people.

  • Campus & Community

    Recognizing exceptional women

    Lena Awwad ’13, the co-author of the influential op-ed “Israel vs. No. 2 Pencils,” was honored with the 2013 Women’s Leadership Award, while Nadia Farjood ’13 won an honorable mention. GSE Dean Kathleen McCartney was also presented with the 2013 Women’s Professional Achievement Award.

  • Arts & Culture

    Challenging ‘eureka’ with rigor

    Renowned British biographer Richard Holmes, speaking at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, reflected on what biography can tell us about science.

  • Campus & Community

    Harvard Announces Selection for Social Choice Fund Investments

    Harvard University announced today the selection of a mutual fund through which it will invest its new social choice fund.

  • Campus & Community

    Her wheels are always turning

    Alice Anne Brown is graduating from Harvard’s Graduate School of Design as an urban planner interested in creating greener, bicycle-friendly cities around the world.

  • Nation & World

    Light along a jagged border

    Harvard researchers have combined new technology with old to better understand conditions in the war-torn border region between Sudan and South Sudan.

  • Campus & Community

    Crime-fighting platform wins President’s Challenge

    Today President Drew Faust named Team Nucleik the grand prize winner of the Harvard University President’s Challenge for social entrepreneurship, hosted by the Harvard Innovation Lab (i-lab).

  • Campus & Community

    Hansjörg Wyss doubles his gift

    Founding donor Hansjörg Wyss doubled his gift to Harvard’s Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering from $125 million to $250 million to the University to further advance the institute’s pioneering work.

  • Campus & Community

    Commencement: It’s a spectator sport

    The sea of caps and gowns, many decorated with colorful regalia, is a memorable sight in Harvard’s Tercentenary Theatre on Commencement Day. But glance beyond the graduates and you’ll find an even larger gathering.

  • Campus & Community

    Shinagel’s legacy honored

    Michael Shinagel was honored on May 14 for his accomplishments as dean of the Extension School, a position he has held since 1977. He will be retiring at the end of this academic year.

  • Health

    Attention, undivided

    Jay Winsten of the Harvard School of Public Health hopes to recruit entertainers for a campaign to reduce distracted driving.

  • Campus & Community

    Inside Pforzheimer House: GreekFest

    For the fourth consecutive year, the Pforzheimer House dining services staff helped students and staff celebrate GreekFest by creating a delicious feast.

  • Nation & World

    Cultivating community in Shanghai

    Kate McFarlin, president of the Harvard Club of Shanghai, wears her dual enthusiasms for Harvard and China on her sleeve.

  • Campus & Community

    New investigators named

    Adam Cohen, professor of chemistry and chemical biology and of physics, and Hopi Hoekstra, professor of organismic and evolutionary biology and molecular and cellular biology, are among the 27 scientists nationwide to be appointed as investigators by the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.

  • Nation & World

    Speaking up for science

    Former National Ocean and Atmospheric Administration administrator Jane Lubchenco described her four years in Washington, D.C., as difficult and frustrating, but said it’s imperative that other scientists follow suit to give science a voice in national policies.

  • Campus & Community

    Five-year partnership strengthens ties

    Five years after Harvard and Boston struck a community benefits cooperation agreement, the University’s neighbors in Allston-Brighton point to an enhanced partnership that has resulted in a vibrant Harvard Allston Education Portal, workforce preparation classes for adults, mentoring for students, and a wide variety of other programs.

  • Science & Tech

    Urgent prep work

    Humanitarian relief workers and climate scientists gathered in Cambridge this week to discuss the connection between climate change and humanitarian disasters and what relief workers can learn from science.

  • Nation & World

    Toward a more competitive U.S.

    At an event at Harvard Business School (HBS) that was three parts analysis and one part rally, participants tried to chart a new path forward for the sluggish U.S. economy — a move that may require a new definition of “competitiveness.”

  • Science & Tech

    The trouble with Kepler

    A malfunction aboard NASA’s Kepler Space Telescope has jeopardized what has been one of the agency’s highest-profile missions, one that has revealed a galaxy rich with planets. The Gazette talked to Astronomy Professor Dimitar Sasselov, one of the mission’s principal investigators, about the implications.

  • Campus & Community

    Style and substance

    The culmination of the Harvard Horizons initiative was a symposium in which eight Ph.D. students each offered five-minute presentations, styled on the popular TED talks, about a specific aspect of their current research.

  • Campus & Community

    New masters for Pforzheimer House

    Professor Anne Harrington and her husband, MIT Museum Director John Durant, have been appointed master and co-master of Pforzheimer House.

  • Arts & Culture

    Catching flux

    Stephen Dupont, an award-winning photographer who traveled repeatedly to Papua New Guinea as a Robert Gardner Fellow, is displaying his works showing the intersection of traditional Papuan life and the industrialized world in a new exhibit at the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology.

  • Campus & Community

    Three honored as HAA medalists

    The Harvard Alumni Association (HAA) has announced that James V. Baker ’68, M.B.A. ’71, William Thaddeus Coleman Jr., J.D. ’43, LL.D. ’96, and Georgene Botyos Herschbach, A.M. ’63, Ph.D. ’69, are the recipients of the 2013 Harvard Medal.

  • Health

    Using clay to grow bone

    Researchers from Harvard-affiliated Brigham and Women’s Hospital (BWH) are the first to report that synthetic silicate nanoplatelets (also known as layered clay) can induce stem cells to become bone cells without the need of additional bone-inducing factors.