All articles


  • Nation & World

    Classic college vs. online learning

    Two top players in the field of higher education explored two almost polar approaches to learning during a discussion at the Harvard Graduate School of Education.

  • Nation & World

    Rolling up their sleeves

    Harvard students and alumni arrive at work sites to begin construction, tutoring, other tasks as part of Alternative Spring Break, a tradition of public service initiated by the student-run Phillips Brooks House Association.

  • Health

    Epstein-Barr Virus implicated as a cause of MS

    Researchers from the Harvard School of Public Health, Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, and a team of collaborators have observed for the first time that the risk of multiple…

  • Health

    War-related stress associated with increased risk of asthma

    The trauma experienced during war may increase the risk of developing asthma, according to the results of a  new study by Harvard researchers at Brigham and Women’s Hospital (BWH), Harvard…

  • Science & Tech

    This is CS50

    Creative vibe colors enormous CS 50 innovation fair

  • Science & Tech

    An earlier changing climate

    Human societies in Europe at the end of the last ice age expanded north across a harsh but changing environment, as glaciers melted and the world got warmer and more humid.

  • Nation & World

    Plugged in

    Leading government technology officers explored how technology can drive democracy forward during a discussion at the Harvard Kennedy School Forum.

  • Campus & Community

    Faculty Council meeting held on March 10

    At its tenth meeting of the year (March 10), the Faculty Council discussed final exams and study abroad transcripts with Jay Harris, the Harry Austryn Wolfson Professor of Jewish Studies and dean of undergraduate education. The council was also briefed about Harvard’s digital dissemination efforts.

  • Health

    Right this way! See it! Taste it!

    Former FDA commissioner David Kessler says overeating has to be attacked the same way that tobacco was in the past, by making it socially unacceptable.

  • Science & Tech

    Scientists discover how ocean bacterium turns carbon into fuel

    Reduce. Reuse. Recycle. We hear this mantra time and again. When it comes to carbon—the “Most Wanted” element in terms of climate change—nature has got reuse and recycle covered. However, it’s up to us to reduce.

  • Campus & Community

    Few U.S. studies compare one drug to another

    Comparing medical treatments to find the best and the cheapest may be a pillar of U.S. healthcare reform efforts, but very little such research is being done, according to a report from Harvard Medical School published on Tuesday

  • Campus & Community

    Poll finds widespread pessimism among the young

    The poll by Harvard’s Institute of Politics found that six out of 10 young adults surveyed worry they may not meet their current bills and obligations.

  • Science & Tech

    Reality check

    Author-turned-activist Bill McKibben says the fight to arrest global warming requires an international movement to force political change.

  • Health

    Alzheimer’s-associated protein may be part of the innate immune system

    Amyloid-beta protein – the primary constituent of the plaques found in the brains of Alzheimer’s disease patients – may be part of the body’s first-line system to defend against infection.…

  • Nation & World

    ‘Jazz’ diplomacy

    Richard Holbrooke, a diplomat for nearly 50 years, imparts to a Harvard audience his insights into current international conflicts, particularly in Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Kashmir.

  • Campus & Community

    Crimson sweep individual championships

    Laura Gemmell ’13 and Colin West ’10 took home College Squash Association individual national championships (March 5-7), continuing Harvard’s dominance in the squash world this season.

  • Campus & Community

    Looking ahead

    On Junior Parents Weekend, students’ mothers and fathers began to ponder what life might be like after graduation from Harvard.

  • Campus & Community

    Princeton douses Crimson hopes

    Women’s basketball team falls to first-place Princeton for first home loss in more than a year.

  • Nation & World

    Chomsky rates Obama’s first year

    Activist Noam Chomsky tells the Memorial Church gathering that President Obama, after a year in office, projects a foreign policy with real vision, but “hasn’t succeeded much in practice.”

  • Health

    It’s all in the cortex

    Research suggests that the brain’s lateral prefrontal cortex plays an important role in showing how well someone can rebound emotionally the day after an argument.

  • Nation & World

    Transfer ‘ensemble,’ Port-au-Prince

    Transporting patients from one location to another in post-quake Haiti can be a complicated task; often involving barriers of logistics, distance, and language. Sometimes the greatest challenge is a ticking clock.

  • Campus & Community

    Climate coverage difficult, but journalists shouldn’t opt out

    Not so long ago it appeared that a U.S. cap-and-trade bill was well on its way to becoming reality. But then came the “climategate” emails and increased political opposition, particularly in the Senate, to taking action. While public worries over the impacts of climate change had once been climbing, they’ve since fallen to levels lower…

  • Campus & Community

    Reducing car and truck carbon emissions difficult but feasible

    A new study from current and former researchers at Harvard Kennedy School’s Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs finds that reducing greenhouse gas emissions from transportation will be a much bigger challenge than conventional wisdom assumes – requiring substantially higher fuel prices combined with more stringent regulation.

  • Nation & World

    Passionate advocate of human rights

    Canadian Supreme Court judge, child of Holocaust survivors, argues passionately that nations should value human rights over simple laws, and that the United Nations should step up.

  • Health

    Infant mortality down, ailments persist

    José Cordero, dean of the University of Puerto Rico’s School of Public Health, said that the progress made in the 20th century on infant mortality has revealed new health concerns stemming from that success: how to reduce birth defects and provide care for the greater number of children who are surviving them.

  • Campus & Community

    Looking ordinary, being exceptional

    Harvard’s Fine Arts Library, in temporary digs at Littauer Hall, follows a gold standard for sustainability.

  • Arts & Culture

    From book to cinema

    FAS professor learns in roundabout fashion that her book about the sexual abuse of Peruvian women has become an inspiration for an award-winning film.

  • Nation & World

    Faith and the marketplace

    A panel of religious scholars examined the role of organized religion in helping to shape the national debate on economic reform and the country’s moral direction.

  • Nation & World

    Days to find a doctor

    Patients at the Harvard Humanitarian Initiative field hospital at Fond Parisien, Haiti, share their stories of the deadly Jan. 12 earthquake and its aftermath.

  • Arts & Culture

    Artists and hard times

    A Harvard Art Museum lecture series explores topics from multiple points of view, in this case concerning economic turmoil.