All articles


  • Campus & Community

    Time travel in chalk

    Members of Professor Ann Pearson’s lab switched from science to art recently, decorating the slate panels outside the Hoffman Laboratory with depictions of three great eras in Earth’s history: the Paleozoic, Mesozoic, and Cenozoic.

  • Nation & World

    Basic science

    A Harvard chemist and two graduate students from Harvard and MIT traveled to Liberia in June to conduct a workshop on science teaching for professors and students in the war-torn nation.

  • Health

    Insights on healthy aging

    New research from Harvard scientists shows that exercise and caloric restriction rejuvenate synapses in laboratory mice, illuminating a reason for the beneficial effects of these regimens on aging.

  • Health

    Exercise, calorie restrictions can rejuvenate older synapses

    Harvard researchers have uncovered a mechanism in mice through which caloric restriction and exercise delay some of the debilitating effects of aging by rejuvenating the connections between nerves and the muscles that they control.

  • Arts & Culture

    One writer’s gospel

    A student in novelist Paul Harding’s last Harvard class recounts the lessons learned.

  • Arts & Culture

    The little book that could

    Novelist Paul Harding rose from obscurity and rejection to win a Pulitzer Prize for his debut book “Tinkers,” which is derived from his family history.

  • Campus & Community

    Adrian Staehli named Loeb Professor of Classical Archaeology

    Archaeologist Adrian Staehli, whose work has challenged conventional interpretations of nudity and the human body in ancient Greek and Roman art, has been named James Loeb Professor of Classical Archaeology at Harvard University, effective next Jan. 1.

  • Health

    Vaccine vacuum

    Small increases in vaccine costs can cause large gaps in protection, study finds. Also, vaccine “scares” may do more harm than previously believed to a population’s “herd immunity.”

  • Campus & Community

    Kindergarten skills pay off in big bucks

    Harvard-led study shows children, whether rich or poor, who were in top-scoring kindergarten classes back in the 1980s have grown up to earn about $1,000 more a year than their peers in weaker performing classes…

  • Health

    Warnings of suicidal intent

    Two powerful new tests developed by Harvard psychologists show great promise in predicting patients’ risk of attempting suicide, researchers say. These tests may help clinicians to overcome their reliance on…

  • Science & Tech

    Inklings of suicide

    Two new computerized tests, developed at Harvard, show promise in predicting patients’ risk of attempting suicide.

  • Campus & Community

    U.S. grants visa to journalist and Nieman fellow

    The U.S. State Department has reversed its decision to deny a visa to leading Colombian journalist Hollman Morris. He is now free to travel to the United States, where he will begin a yearlong fellowship at the Nieman Foundation for Journalism at Harvard University.

  • Campus & Community

    B-Schools All A-Twitter Over Social Media

    Harvard Business School (Harvard Full-Time MBA Profile) and Columbia University’s Graduate School of Business (Columbia Full-Time MBA Profile) have joined a growing list of business schools that are adding courses on social media to their MBA curricula…

  • Campus & Community

    Nasa Discoveries Spark Hopes Of Alien Life

    Nasa’s planet-hunting deep space observatory has found hundreds of new potential planets, sparking hopes of finding other worlds similar to Earth… Scientists say the results contradict older theories that had…

  • Science & Tech

    Hyperfast star was booted from Milky Way

    A hundred million years ago, a triple-star system was traveling through the bustling center of our Milky Way galaxy when it made a life-changing misstep. The trio wandered too close to the galaxy’s giant black hole, which captured one of the stars and hurled the other two out of the Milky Way.

  • Campus & Community

    Zon, Scadden recognized by American Society of Hematology

    Two Harvard faculty members and members of the Harvard Stem Cell Institute, David Scadden and Leonard Zon, have won awards from the American Society of Hematology for contributions to understanding and treating blood diseases.

  • Health

    Scadden, Zon win Hematology Society awards

    Two Harvard professors will receive awards from the American Society of Hematology for their “significant contributions to the understanding and treatment of hematologic diseases.” David Scadden, who is co-director of the…

  • Campus & Community

    Eat, pray, Lefty’s

    Lefty’s Silver Cart is the work of Philip Francis, a doctoral candidate at Harvard Divinity School with an affinity for profound reflection, and for produce.

  • Campus & Community

    Golden state for Lin

    Former Harvard star Jeremy Lin, an undrafted free agent guard, was signed by the Golden State Warriors yesterday…

  • Campus & Community

    Learning in the labs

    This summer 300 undergraduates from across the country have come to Harvard to pursue research opportunities. Long a mecca for students seeking such experiences, the University’s various research programs existed independently until this year. Now, they’re working in tandem with the Office of the Provost.

  • Campus & Community

    German art scholar named associate curator at Busch-Reisinger Museum

    Lynette Roth, a specialist in German art of the early 20th century, has been named the Daimler-Benz Associate Curator of the Busch-Reisinger Museum.

  • Campus & Community

    Jeremy Lin ’10 signs with Warriors

    Former Crimson basketball co-captain Jeremy Lin ’10 has been signed as a point guard to the Golden State Warriors.

  • Nation & World

    Bunk or boon?

    Harvard experts weigh in on a massive finance reform bill that draws praise, skepticism — and ire.

  • Science & Tech

    University adopts faculty financial conflict of interest policies

    The Harvard Corporation has adopted a University-wide faculty financial conflict of interest policy, the first time such a policy has been crafted to cover faculty members across the entire campus.…

  • Campus & Community

    Medical School revises COI policy

    Harvard Medical School released a series of revisions to its conflict of interest policy that strengthens its commitment to transparency and financial disclosure while recognizing the School’s commitment to industry collaboration.

  • Campus & Community

    Conflict of interest policy adopted

    The Harvard Corporation has adopted a University-wide conflict of interest policy, the first time such a policy has been crafted to cover faculty members across the entire campus.

  • Health

    Medical School revises conflict of interest policy

    Harvard Medical School (HMS) released a series of revisions to its conflict of interest (COI) policy today that strengthens its commitment to transparency and financial disclosure while recognizing the School’s commitment…

  • Science & Tech

    Some key points from the new University faculty financial conflict of interest policy

    The new Harvard University Policy on Individual Financial Conflicts of Interest for Persons Holding Faculty and Teaching Appointments (University Conflict of Interest Policy) is built upon 12 principles that establish a…

  • Campus & Community

    Guidelines for Schools’ conflict of interest policies

    The new Harvard University Policy on Individual Financial Conflicts of Interest for Persons Holding Faculty and Teaching Appointments (University Conflict of Interest Policy) is built upon 12 principles that establish a framework to guide the Schools in developing their implementation plans.

  • Nation & World

    Brain gain

    A social scientist looks at how a patient China is reversing brain drain to the West.