All articles


  • Arts & Culture

    While you were away

    A roundup of recent books by Harvard faculty members.

  • Campus & Community

    A moving experience

    As Hurricane Irene moved up the East Coast, residents of Currier House raced to move in before the storm arrived.

  • Campus & Community

    ‘Playing it Safe’ on campus

    The Harvard University Police Department is releasing its annual Clery Act report, titled “Playing it Safe.”

  • Arts & Culture

    On summer break, a poem

    An undergraduate on summer break is inspired to write a poem celebrating Harvard’s 375th anniversary.

  • Campus & Community

    Calling the ‘summer dogs’

    After a summer of workouts, Harvard football players look to their opening game against Holy Cross, hoping to create a season to remember.

  • Campus & Community

    Finding meaning in loss

    Jennifer Page Hughes, a psychologist at the Bureau of Study Counsel, coped with a senseless death by helping others — from Harvard students to the families of 9/11 victims — deal with grief.

  • Campus & Community

    How Harvard celebrated

    A look at how Harvard has celebrated some previous anniversaries.

  • Campus & Community

    A party starts 375th celebrations

    Entertainment, food, festivities highlight October gathering.

  • Nation & World

    Justice for Kenya’s Mau Mau

    As a human rights group seeks justice for veterans of an anticolonialist rebellion, a Harvard historian helps to make the case.

  • Science & Tech

    Wake-up call

    Insomnia is costing the average U.S. worker 11.3 days, or $2,280, in lost productivity every year, according to a study led by Ronald Kessler of Harvard Medical School.

  • Campus & Community

    Banner year ahead

    Harvard gears up to celebrate an event-filled 375th anniversary, embracing what President Faust calls a “tradition of imaginative change.”

  • Campus & Community

    A portrait of change

    Preston Williams was honored with a new portrait in Andover Hall. The picture of Williams, the Houghton Research Professor of Theology and Contemporary Change Emeritus, is part of the Harvard Foundation Portraiture Project.

  • Campus & Community

    University leaders welcome freshmen

    Harvard’s annual convocation ceremony gives members of the Class of 2015 their first taste of the University’s history and traditions.

  • Campus & Community

    It’s morning in a new year

    Harvard President Drew Faust spoke at the first Morning Prayers service, encouraging listeners to consider the past as a “valuable resource” for contemplating the future.

  • Health

    First lizard genome sequenced


    The green anole lizard is an agile and active creature, and so are elements of its genome. This genomic agility and other new clues have emerged from the full sequencing of the lizard’s genome and may offer insights into how the genomes of humans, mammals, and their reptilian counterparts have evolved since mammals and reptiles…

  • Campus & Community

    Remembering 9/11

    Harvard plans services, vigils, panels to draw meaning from 10th anniversary of 9/11 tragedy.

  • Campus & Community

    Library seeking proposals for Library Lab

    The Harvard University Library is soliciting proposals for projects to improve the library via the Library Lab program.

  • Campus & Community

    They Ride by Dawn

    They are an eclectic group of Harvard students, staff, faculty, and community members. They range in age from their late teens to 50-something. They can be freshmen or CEOs, but they move fast, and under their own power. They ride by bike.

  • Science & Tech

    Connecting with freshmen

    Harvard College freshmen got their first taste Aug. 26 of the world of ideas awaiting them over the next four years in a talk by Professor Nicholas Christakis, who delivered the 2011 Opening Days Lecture, “Connected: The Surprising Power of Our Social Networks and How They Shape Our Lives.”

  • Arts & Culture

    Creative opportunity

    The tradition of visiting faculty at Harvard’s Department of Visual and Environmental Studies brings art and insight to the classroom.

  • Campus & Community

    Tropical Storm Irene

    Harvard University officials responded to reports of downed utility lines and broken branches, but received no reports of injuries or serious damage as Tropical Storm Irene passed through the region.…

  • Campus & Community

    Hurricane Irene situation report

    Update on the Hurricane Irene situation.

  • Science & Tech

    Brain navigation

    Hanspeter Pfister, an expert in high-performance computing and visualization, is part of an interdisciplinary team collaborating on the Connectome Project at the Center for Brain Science. The project aims to create a wiring diagram of all the neurons in the brain.

  • Health

    From skin cells to motor neurons

    Harvard stem cell researchers have succeeded in reprogramming adult mouse skin cells directly into the type of motor neurons damaged in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, best known as Lou Gehrig’s disease, and spinal muscular atrophy.

  • Campus & Community

    Hammonds greets Class of 2015

    Harvard College Dean Evelynn M. Hammonds welcomed members of the Class of 2015 to campus during a session at Sanders Theatre.

  • Health

    Tax on sugary drinks?

    The global obesity epidemic has been escalating for decades, yet long-term prevention efforts have barely begun and are inadequate, according to a new paper from international public health experts published in the Aug. 25 issue of the journal The Lancet.

  • Campus & Community

    Harvard battles MIT in consulting competition

    Harvard hosted the third annual MIT vs. Harvard Case Competition.

  • Campus & Community

    Harvard’s Mobile Yard Tour app

    Harvard University is commemorating its 375th anniversary this year with a special gift — a mobile tour of Harvard Yard for visitors, neighbors, and members of the Harvard community.

  • Health

    Attacking Ebola

    Two Harvard-led research teams report identifying a critical protein that Ebola virus exploits to cause deadly infections. The protein target is an essential element through which the virus enters living cells to cause disease.

  • Health

    The efficient caveman cook

    Harvard researchers say the rise of cooking likely occurred more than 1.9 million years ago and bestowed on human ancestors a gift of time in the form of hours each day not spent eating.