All articles


  • Campus & Community

    Suzanne Vogel, researcher of Japanese culture, 81

    Suzanne Hall Vogel, a psychotherapist at Harvard University Health Services for 27 years, died on June 19.

  • Campus & Community

    ‘Spider-Man,’ the scavenger hunt

    The Harvard Museum of Natural History has launched a summer-long program called Spider Sense! Scavenger Hunt, designed to entertain fans of the comics character and natural science alike.

  • Nation & World

    Balky states likely to join Medicaid expansion

    Experts speaking at The Forum at Harvard School of Public Health discussed the health care reform law Friday, a day after the U.S. Supreme Court upheld most of its core but struck down drastic penalties for states that don’t participate in a major expansion of Medicaid.

  • Campus & Community

    Obaid joins Belfer Center as visiting fellow

    Nawaf Obaid joins Belfer Center as visiting fellow

  • Health

    Worry over drug-resistant TB

    A symposium at the Broad Institute calls for mobilization to battle drug-resistant tuberculosis.

  • Campus & Community

    Harvard crew stays perfect on second day at Henley Royal Regatta

    Harvard and Radcliffe will send five crews to the third day of the Henley Royal Regatta after three boats won for the second straight day and the Radcliffe heavyweight varsity eight opened with a victory June 28 on the Thames River.

  • Campus & Community

    A day in the life

    Harvard Kennedy School Shadow Initiative Program

  • Nation & World

    Battle won, but more to come

    Harvard School of Public Health analysts probe the importance of the Supreme Court ruling upholding national health care, and explain the law’s next challenge: the November election

  • Health

    Win for Obama, but no let-up in debate

    The U.S. Supreme Court decision on Thursday upholding the basis of national health care reform is far from the last word on the topic, Harvard faculty members said, and merely raises the curtain on act two: November’s general election.

  • Campus & Community

    Add tai chi to reduce stress

    Students are gathering in Harvard Yard on Tuesdays this summer to take free martial arts lessons, as part of the University’s campaign to encourage use of common spaces.

  • Arts & Culture

    Edward Lear’s natural history

    Edward Lear, a master of nonsense verse and travel writing, was at a young age one of the most accomplished natural history painters of his time.

  • Health

    When a calorie is not just a calorie

    A new study by Harvard researchers and published in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) challenges the notion that “a calorie is a calorie.”

  • Health

    Heart attack worsens atherosclerosis

    Researchers at Harvard Medical School and Harvard-affiliated Massachusetts General Hospital have found that the body’s immune response to heart attacks actually worsens atherosclerosis, increasing future heart attack risk, according to a study published in the journal Nature.

  • Nation & World

    Death penalty in decline

    A Harvard Law School panel looks at the future of the death penalty worldwide and sees a decline in this “organized violence” by nation-states — but a few “dark spots” too.

  • Health

    Life partner

    Researchers in the Harvard lab of Bauer Fellow Peter Turnbaugh are seeking to understand how the microbes that live in our intestines affect the drugs we take and the food we eat.

  • Science & Tech

    Planet probe

    In a paper published in the June 7 issue of Nature, Associate Professor Sujoy Mukhopadhyay presents evidence that the Earth’s deep mantle incorporated gas found in the solar nebula in the first few millions of years of the solar system’s formation.

  • Health

    The growing brain

    As reported on June 7 in the journal Neuron, a team of researchers led by Professor Jeff Lichtman has found that just days before birth mice undergo an explosion of neuromuscular branching. At birth, the research showed, some muscle fibers are contacted by as many as 10 nerve cells. Within days, however, all but one…

  • Nation & World

    Royal views

    Crown Prince Felipe of Spain covered a range of topics — working his way from the 15th century to the euro crisis — in a talk at Harvard Kennedy School.

  • Nation & World

    The rigor of reargument

    Over many months, a Harvard Law School team put in long hours to craft a legal brief, hoping to sway a Supreme Court decision that will affect the fate of lawsuits regarding international human rights.

  • Science & Tech

    Desert mystery

    In a talk at Harvard’s Semitic Museum, archaeologist Robert Mason described the discovery of mysterious rock formations near an ancient monastery in Syria.

  • Health

    My microbes

    A new study reports that the superabundance of microbial life lining our GI tracts has co-evolved with us. These bacteria, which are essential for a healthy immune system, are ultimately our evolutionary partners.

  • Campus & Community

    Fertile minds

    Wrapping up an arboretum internship, students from Norfolk County Agricultural High School visited Harvard Yard to learn about Harvard Landscape Services’ recent switch to organic methods and materials.

  • Health

    Brigham team implants artificial heart

    The first complete artificial heart transplant in New England was performed at Harvard-affiliated Brigham and Women’s Hospital.

  • Campus & Community

    375th: A look back

    This academic year, Harvard celebrated the 375th anniversary of the founding of Harvard College in 1636. To mark this milestone, the University launched a yearlong series of programs and activities, beginning with a celebration in Harvard Yard in October.

  • Campus & Community

    Straight from the farm

    Harvard welcomed back farmers’ markets in Allston and Cambridge.

  • Campus & Community

    Oxford awards honorary degree to Faust

    Harvard President Drew Faust was awarded an honorary degree by Oxford University in a ceremony marked by traditions four centuries old on a campus at least twice as old as Harvard’s.

  • Health

    Climbing out of hiding

    For decades, scientists have been stymied in their attempts to better understand proboscis anole, a small lizard whose defining feature is a horn on its nose, because it appeared to be all but extinct — until now.

  • Campus & Community

    Sampling Harvard, and science

    Harvard hosted a Step UP/Project TEACH event for students and parents from the Hennigan Elementary School in Jamaica Plain and the E. Greenwood Leadership Academy in Hyde Park. The effort is part of a program to show young students what college is like, particularly in the sciences.

  • Nation & World

    With health rights denied, a patient had no hope

    Those interested in health and human rights from around the world gathered at the Harvard School of Public Health this week for an executive education program intended to provide practical lessons in rights litigation and create a community for those who care about extending health care to all.

  • Health

    The problem of pre-existing mutations

    In a critical step that may lead to more-effective HIV treatments, Harvard scientists have found that, in a small number of HIV patients, pre-existing mutations in the virus can cause it to develop resistance to the drugs used to slow the progression of the disease.