All articles


  • Science & Tech

    Pollock: Artist and physicist?

    A quantitative analysis of the streams, drips, and coils of artist Jackson Pollock by a Harvard mathematician and others reveals that he had to be slow and deliberate to exploit fluid dynamics as he did.

  • Arts & Culture

    When three is also one

    The renovated and expanded facility of the Harvard Art Museums eventually will link the University’s collections under one roof.

  • Campus & Community

    Staffing up in Allston

    Harvard University and Boston’s Allston-Brighton Resource Center host a job fair to connect local residents with Stone Hearth Pizza’s hiring managers.

  • Science & Tech

    Just rewards

    A Harvard University study built around an innovative economic game indicates that, at least for our younger selves, the desire for equity often trumps the urge to maximize rewards.

  • Campus & Community

    HMS professor recognized for work

    Margarita Alegría, professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School, is the recipient of the 2011 Excellence in Hispanic Mental Health Research, Advocacy, and Leadership Award from the National Resource Center for Hispanic Mental Health.

  • Campus & Community

    Gates receives honor, gives lecture

    Henry Louis Gates Jr., the Alphonse Fletcher University Professor and the director of the W.E.B. Du Bois Institute for African and African American Research at Harvard University, was honored with the 2011 Media Bridge-Builder Award from the Tanenbaum Center for Interreligious Understanding.

  • Health

    New hope against diabetes

    Results from a phase 1 drug trial by Harvard Medical School and Massachusetts General Hospital researchers showed that a decades-old tuberculosis drug knocked out the autoimmune cells that attack diabetic patients’ insulin-producing cells, followed by indications that pancreatic function was improving, albeit transiently.

  • Science & Tech

    For Harvard, an IT summit

    From across the University, members of the information technology community gathered for the first Harvard IT Summit.

  • Nation & World

    2011 Harvard University Commencement Address by Liberian President Sirleaf

    President of Liberia, Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, speaks at Harvard’s 2011 Commencement afternoon exercises at history Tercentenary Theater on May 26, 2011.

  • Campus & Community

    2011 Harvard University Commencement Address by President Faust

    President Drew Faust speaks at Harvard’s historic Tercentenary Theater during Commencement afternoon exercises on May 26, 2011

  • Campus & Community

    2011 Harvard University Class Day Speech by Amy Poehler

    Amy Poehler addresses the class of 2011 during Commencement week at Harvard’s history Tercentenary Theater.

  • Health

    A focus on battling tuberculosis

    Scientists from around New England gathered at the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard to discuss the latest research and findings about tuberculosis at the Fifth Annual New England Tuberculosis Symposium.

  • Health

    Where there’s smoke, there’s ire

    Speakers at a Harvard School of Public Health conference on smoking hailed the late Sen. Edward M. Kennedy’s work to give the Food and Drug Administration new regulatory power over tobacco products and said, if wielded properly, it could prove a key weapon for better health.

  • Campus & Community

    Kennedy named senior associate provost

    Mary Lee Kennedy, executive director of knowledge and library services at Harvard Business School, has been named senior associate provost for the Harvard Library.

  • Science & Tech

    From A to Zeega

    Three Harvard affiliates nab a big new-media prize, and marvel at the University’s converging forces that mix the digital age with traditional scholarship.

  • Arts & Culture

    Art and the immigrants

    Through an innovative program, immigrants explore the Harvard Art Museums’ galleries, polishing their English skills and learning lessons in American democracy.

  • Campus & Community

    Summers wins Global Economy Prize

    Lawrence S. Summers has been awarded the 2011 Global Economy Prize by the Kiel Institute for the World Economy.

  • Health

    For love of the creepy, crawly

    Biologists from around the world are on campus this week for an international conference on invertebrate morphology sponsored by the Museum of Comparative Zoology, the Harvard Museum of Natural History, and the Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology.

  • Campus & Community

    Q&A on Harvard in Allston

    The leaders of Harvard’s Allston Work Team discuss their recommendations on how the University might proceed in planning for its properties in the neighborhood.

  • Arts & Culture

    A sound welcome

    The arrival of the first components of the new Fisk Opus 139 organ for the Memorial Church was welcomed with song on June 20.

  • Health

    Clues on how flowering plants spread

    Researchers at Harvard’s Arnold Arboretum have highlighted female competition among plants, saying it is a new factor that could have driven the mystifying diversity of flowering plants.

  • Campus & Community

    Come on, Eileen

    Workers at Harvard’s Biological Laboratories organize a team to raise funds for cancer research, and to support ill colleague Eileen Snow.

  • Health

    Cell’s linchpin protein found

    After decades of failed efforts, researchers have discovered, through a combination of digital database mining and laboratory assays, the linchpin protein that drives mitochondria’s calcium machinery.

  • Campus & Community

    2011 Harvard Commencement Timelapse

    Experience all the hard work and excitement that goes into setting up and closing down Commencement week in four minutes.

  • Campus & Community

    Recommendations for Allston

    The Harvard University Allston Work Team presented its recommendations to Harvard President Drew Faust June 16. The report reaffirms the University’s commitment to Allston and points to development options in the next decade, including science facilities, housing, and a private-sector enterprise research campus.

  • Science & Tech

    In the Arboretum, another world

    The Arboretum is so serene and languid it can seem almost imaginary. On a warm summer day, dogs and runners and bicyclists all share the nearly silent space under the shade of giant and rare trees of odd shapes and sizes.

  • Campus & Community

    Surrounded by nature & reflected in it

    From the oversize windows in the room called “the Fishbowl” at Currier House, you can see lush green grass and blossoming trees on alternate sloping hillsides.

  • Campus & Community

    Ramanathan honored as Pew Scholar

    Harvard University’s Sharad Ramanathan, assistant professor of molecular and cellular biology, has been named a Pew Scholar in the Biomedical Sciences.

  • Campus & Community

    Justice Goes Global

    Michael J. Sandel, the Harvard University political philosopher, is a rock star in Asia, and people in China, Japan and South Korea scalp tickets to hear him..

  • Campus & Community

    TV time tied to diabetes, death

    People who spend more hours in front of the television are at greater risk of dying, or developing diabetes and heart disease…