All articles


  • Campus & Community

    Treasures hiding in plain sight

    A program at Widener Library rescues vulnerable holdings from its 65 miles of shelves by linking alert students with Harvard authorities on conservation and digitization.

  • Campus & Community

    In the spirit of the law

    A new complex at Harvard Law School is designed to pull its offshoots together, while promoting collaboration and interaction. Associate Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court Elena Kagan will be on hand to dedicate the new building on April 20.

  • Science & Tech

    Earth’s sister in the crosshairs

    A new book by Harvard astronomer Dimitar Sasselov explains the revolution in understanding the universe that views life as a natural part of planetary evolution and that has researchers on the brink of finding worlds that echo this one.

  • Nation & World

    Policing for, and with, the community

    The idea that law enforcement should work with citizens to help prevent, reduce, and solve crimes took flight through an unusual collaboration of academics and police leaders at Harvard Kennedy School.

  • Campus & Community

    Harvard’s long-ago student risings

    A century of occasional unrest at American colleges reflected a time of unbridled liberty and questionable self-discipline.

  • Arts & Culture

    Six fresh books worth perusing

    Among these recent titles by Harvard writers, there’s something for everyone.

  • Arts & Culture

    Tripping the arts fantastic

    Harvard’s Arts First festival is celebrating its 20th year with poetry, performance, and a stunning public art display.

  • Campus & Community

    The story of the girl with pink sneakers

    A budding reporter learns to combine her appreciation of science with the joys of storytelling.

  • Campus & Community

    At Herbaria, a new career blossoms

    Museum exhibition designer Danielle Hanrahan always loved art and nature. A late-in-life career move to the Harvard Herbaria allowed her a chance to explore the latter.

  • Health

    Beyond the ivory tower, into the world

    The Harvard School of Public Health’s Division of Policy Translation and Leadership Development seeks to give faculty the tools to create broad change and to connect global leaders with the School’s research to improve conditions on the ground.

  • Campus & Community

    A look inside: Eliot House

    At Eliot House, the river House named for Harvard’s longest-serving president, crew is king.

  • Arts & Culture

    Poetry in motion

    Something about Harvard, one of the world’s most rigorous universities also helps poets to blossom. It has a lyric legacy that spans hundreds of years and helped to shape the world’s literary canon.

  • Arts & Culture

    Echoes of the Titanic

    On the centennial of the ship’s sinking, Harvard historian Steven Biel has a new edition of his book, which traces the cultural arc of that myth-making disaster.

  • Arts & Culture

    McEwan recounts his missteps

    Fact-fussy readers help author to remember that a novel’s “air of reality” is among its supreme virtues.

  • Health

    The future of self-knowledge

    Anne Wojcicki, chief executive officer and co-founder of 23andMe, talked about growth in personal genomics in an event sponsored by the Program on Science, Technology and Society.

  • Health

    Protecting the heart with optimism

    Work by HSPH researchers suggests a connection between psychological well-being and a reduced risk of heart attacks, strokes, and other cardiovascular events.

  • Science & Tech

    Elegant entanglement

    Harvard scientists have taken a critical step toward building a quantum computer — a device that could someday harness subatomic particles such as electrons to perform calculations far faster than the most powerful supercomputers.

  • Nation & World

    47 proposals win Hauser grants

    The Harvard Initiative for Learning and Teaching (HILT) is supporting 47 proposals from the Harvard community. The efforts will receive a total of nearly $2 million in inaugural Hauser Fund grants.

  • Campus & Community

    Harvard staffers, faculty raise $11,700

    Red Sox-themed fundraiser nets $11,700 for the Jimmy Fund.

  • Science & Tech

    Self-assembly as a guide

    Vinothan Manoharan, an assistant professor of chemical engineering and physics at the School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, wants to make self-assembly — when particles interact with one another and spontaneously arrange themselves into organized structures — happen in the laboratory to treat life-threatening diseases or manufacture useful objects.

  • Campus & Community

    Raphael Bostic named chief marshal

    The Harvard Alumni Association (HAA) announced that Raphael W. Bostic ’87 has been chosen by his classmates to serve as chief marshal for Commencement 2012 as the University concludes its yearlong 375th anniversary celebration.

  • Campus & Community

    Stephen Greenblatt wins Pulitzer Prize

    Stephen Greenblatt, the John Cogan University Professor of the Humanities, was awarded the 2012 Pulitzer Prize for general nonfiction for “The Swerve: How the World Became Modern.”

  • Campus & Community

    Guthrie in the outdoors

    Harvard will host a live outdoor simulcast of the American Repertory Theater’s production of “Woody Sez: The Life and Music of Woody Guthrie” on May 17. Tickets are available May 3.

  • Campus & Community

    AACR honors Alan D’Andrea

    The American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) presented Alan D. D’Andrea with the 52nd Annual AACR G.H.A. Clowes Memorial Award for his work in understanding cancer survival and progression.

  • Health

    Survival of the selfless

    In a talk sponsored by the Harvard Museum of Natural History, biologist E.O. Wilson said that competition among groups of humans is a likely explanation for the rise of altruistic behavior in individuals.

  • Campus & Community

    Green stars

    On April 12, hundreds of staff, students, and faculty gathered to recognize more than 60 individual and team winners at the third annual Green Carpet Awards hosted by the Office for Sustainability.

  • Campus & Community

    Tuned to emotions

    Student Mental Health Liaisons promote emotional well-being among their classmates through outreach, events, and activities.

  • Nation & World

    10 finalists in President’s Challenge

    Harvard University has chosen 10 teams as finalists in the President’s Challenge for social entrepreneurship. President Drew Faust created the challenge to encourage student teams from across the University to develop entrepreneurial solutions to five of the world’s most important social issues.

  • Nation & World

    Kissinger looks back

    Henry Kissinger has spent more than half a century thinking about and shaping foreign policy. At Sanders Theatre on Wednesday, the former Secretary of State reflected on the “hobby that became my profession.”

  • Campus & Community

    They pledge allegiance

    Harvard University students and staff on Monday helped to celebrate the new U.S. citizenship of 23 staff members, all of whom achieved their goal with the aid of the Harvard Citizenship Program.