All articles


  • Health

    Too much variety

    More choices for Medicare beneficiaries may not always be better, according to Harvard Medical School research.

  • Campus & Community

    Hidden Spaces: The tiny cemetery

    Hidden Spaces is part of a series about lesser-known spaces at Harvard. The little cemetery, hidden at the far end of the 265-acre Arboretum, holds several headstones and a crypt and was once part of the Walter Street “Berrying” Ground.

  • Arts & Culture

    Mapping out Harry Potter’s world

    The Harvard Museum of Natural History celebrates the world of J.K. Rowling’s Harry Potter in a gallery scavenger hunt that has proven to be a popular and educational experience.

  • Campus & Community

    Intuitive eating seminar open for enrollment

    Harvard University Health Services’ Intuitive Eating Seminar is open for registration.

  • Science & Tech

    Electrical conductor sparks interest

    Harvard and Stanford chemists have created and purified an organic semiconductor with excellent electrical properties, simultaneously confirming a screening process being used to find new photovoltaic materials.

  • Campus & Community

    Harvard College student awarded Pearson Prize

    Harvard College’s Niharika Jain is one of 70 students from around the country who have been awarded the Pearson Prize for Higher Education.

  • Campus & Community

    Havens, professor of psychology, dies

    Leston Havens, professor of psychology emeritus at Harvard Medical School, died on July 29 after an extended illness.

  • Health

    Clearer view of Parkinson’s

    A new study finds that a protein key to Parkinson’s disease has likely been mischaracterized. The protein, alpha-synuclein, appears to have a radically different structure in healthy cells than previously thought, challenging existing disease paradigms and suggesting a new therapeutic approach.

  • Health

    Alien world is blacker than coal

    Imagine a giant world like Jupiter, but more alien than any planet in our solar system. Instead of displaying gleaming clouds colored white and salmon, this world is darker than the blackest lump of coal. It glows only with a feeble red light like a stove’s electric burner — the result of scorching heat from…

  • Health

    What’s behind the predictably loopy gut

    Between conception and birth, the human gut grows more than two meters long, looping and coiling within the tiny abdomen. Within a given species, the developing vertebrate gut always loops into the same formation — however, until now, it has not been clear why.

  • Campus & Community

    Brown wins Sacks Award for research

    The National Institute of Statistical Sciences has presented the 2011 Jerome Sacks Award for Cross-Disciplinary Research to Emery N. Brown of MIT and Harvard.

  • Campus & Community

    The classroom, circa 2050

    Cambridge-Harvard Summer Academy encourages students to design an offbeat, futuristic high school, applying geometry lessons in the process.

  • Health

    Risky eating

    A new study by Harvard School of Public Health researchers finds a strong association between the consumption of red meat — particularly when the meat is processed — and an increased risk of type 2 diabetes.

  • Nation & World

    Closing the workplace gender gap

    Behavioral economist Iris Bohnet studies gender gaps in economic opportunity, trust and betrayal aversion, and how these and related issues affect the workings of governments, economies, organizations, and individual interactions.

  • Health

    Sleep, oxygen, and dementia

    Harvard research finds that sleep-disordered breathing is associated with a higher risk of cognitive impairment in older women.

  • Campus & Community

    Schermerhorn named distinguished fellow

    The Society for Vascular Surgery elected Harvard Medical School professor Marc Schermerhorn as a distinguished fellow.

  • Campus & Community

    Ten professors named Cabot Fellows

    Ten professors in Harvard’s Faculty of Arts and Sciences have been named Walter Channing Cabot Fellows.

  • Science & Tech

    What’s in a liquid

    New 3-D nanostructured chip identifies unknown liquids instantly, offering a litmus test for surface tension.

  • Health

    Strength in numbers

    Harvard researchers have created an analogue of what they think the first multicellular cooperation might have looked like, showing that yeast cells — in an environment that requires them to work for their food — grow and reproduce better in multicellular clumps than singly.

  • Health

    Grant backs study of cancer-obesity link

    The Harvard School of Public Health has been awarded a five-year, $10 million grant from the National Cancer Institute for a new research center to study the relationship between obesity and cancer.

  • Campus & Community

    Digging in the Yard, it’s child’s play

    Summer school students unearthed a variety of artifacts during their archaeology class in Harvard Yard, the most unusual of which was a fragment of a doll’s face from the 1800s.

  • Nation & World

    Strong evidence

    The work of a Harvard history professor has bolstered the case of a group of elderly Kenyans who are seeking reparations from the British government for rape, castration, beatings, and other abuses that they say occurred during colonial-era efforts to suppress Kenya’s Mau Mau uprising.

  • Campus & Community

    Baruj Benacerraf, Nobel laureate, 90

    Baruj Benacerraf, who earned a 1980 Nobel Prize in physiology or medicine for his groundbreaking research in immunology and led Dana-Farber Cancer Institute through a period of tremendous growth beginning that year, died in Boston on Aug. 2 at the age of 90.

  • Campus & Community

    Green building milestone

    CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Aug. 1, 2011 — In a first for any higher education institution, Harvard University has achieved its 50th Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) certification. The green…

  • Campus & Community

    A green building milestone

    As of this week, Harvard became the first higher education institution to complete 50 Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) certifications for construction projects around campus, a process 10 years in the making.

  • Science & Tech

    Gauging forest changes

    Harvard scientists are leading an international collaboration that aims to coordinate research, data collection, scientist training, and analysis of information gleaned from two networks of forest plots, one through the Harvard-affiliated Center for Tropical Forest Science and the second created by Chinese scientists.

  • Campus & Community

    IOP announces fall fellows

    The Institute of Politics, located at the Harvard Kennedy School, announced the selection of an experienced group of individuals for resident and visiting fellowships this fall.

  • Campus & Community

    Harvard Farmers’ Market

    From lettuce to lobsters and everything in between, Harvard Farmers’ Market vendors dish on the fruits of their labor.

  • Campus & Community

    Plans in motion

    Boston’s new bike-sharing program, Hubway, launches today (July 28), and University officials, in collaboration with the city of Cambridge, are planning to bring the program to Harvard’s main campus, possibly as early as this fall.

  • Nation & World

    How young students think

    “Mind in the Making” explores links among social, emotional, and intellectual learning. It was part of a weeklong seminar called “Mind in the Making,” developed by the Harvard Achievement Support Initiative (HASI) as part of the University’s commitment to public service.