All articles


  • Campus & Community

    HBS faculty win McKinsey Awards

    Three Harvard Business School professors, Gary P. Pisano, the Harry E. Figgie Jr. Professor of Business Administration; Willy C. Shih, professor of management practice; and Clayton M. Christensen, the Robert and Jane Cizik Professor of Business Administration, were recently honored with 2009 McKinsey Awards, presented by the Harvard Business Review and the management consulting firm…

  • Campus & Community

    Photographic memory

    By a roundabout route, Robin Kelsey became an authority on photography, eventually becoming a professor in the field at Harvard.

  • Campus & Community

    HBS’s J. Sterling Livingston dies at 93

    J. Sterling Livingston, a retired professor at Harvard Business School (HBS), died on Feb. 14 from multiple organ failure. He was 93.

  • Campus & Community

    American Chemical Society presents two with awards

    Robert J. Madix, a senior research fellow in chemical engineering at Harvard’s School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS), and Sang-Hee Shim, a postdoctoral fellow in chemistry and chemical biology in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences along with her mentor Martin T. Zanni, an associate professor of chemistry at University of Wisconsin, Madison, were…

  • Campus & Community

    Andrew Mattei Gleason

    At a Meeting of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences on March 2, 2010, the minute honoring the life and service of the late Andrew Mattei Gleason, Hollis Professor of Mathematics and Natural Philosophy Emeritus, was placed upon the records. Gleason’s best-known work is his resolution of Hilbert’s Fifth Problem.

  • Campus & Community

    Gazette staffer recognized for poetry

    Sarah Sweeney of the Harvard Gazette has been awarded a $5,000 prize from the Dorothy Sargent Rosenberg Foundation. The foundation annually honors poets under the age of 40 whose work celebrates the human spirit.

  • Campus & Community

    Sisters in arms

    Qualification for the NCAA Championships has become something of a ritual for recent members of the Harvard women’s fencing team, a far cry from the sports origins on campus dating back to 1888, but not far removed from the year the team officially came into being in 1974.

  • Campus & Community

    Robert C. Merton receives Kolmogorov Medal

    Robert C. Merton, John and Natty McArthur University Professor at Harvard Business School and the 1997 co-winner of the Nobel Memorial Prize in the Economic Sciences, recently received the Kolmogorov Medal from the University of London.

  • Campus & Community

    Memorial service for Leon Kirchner

    A memorial gathering in remembrance of Leon Kirchner, the Walter Bigelow Rosen Professor of Music Emeritus, will be held on Apr. 8 (7:30-9:30 p.m.) at John Knowles Paine Concert Hall.

  • Campus & Community

    Faculty Council holds March 24 meeting

    At its eleventh meeting of the year on March 24, the Faculty Council discussed a proposed conflict of interest policy and the report of the Committee to Review the Administrative Board.

  • Campus & Community

    Augustus A. White III receives Tipton award for orthopedic leadership

    Augustus A. White III, the Ellen and Melvin Gordon Distinguished Professor of Medical Education and professor of orthopedic surgery at Harvard Medical School, was recently honored with the fifth annual William W. Tipton Jr. M.D. Leadership Award for his work as an educator, mentor, and champion of diversity initiatives.

  • Campus & Community

    Around the Schools: Faculty of Arts and Sciences

    What big questions will occupy the world’s social scientists in the coming decades? On Saturday (April 10), a dozen “big thinkers” will share their thoughts on the hardest problems in social science.

  • Arts & Culture

    Building a better brain

    New book chronicles how the mind works and how we can influence that to help ourselves succeed.

  • Nation & World

    What Haiti needs … now

    Former Haiti Prime Minister Michèle Pierre-Louis said shelter, jobs, and education are the top priorities in the earthquake-ravaged nation.

  • Arts & Culture

    A Tenth of a Second: A History

    When clocks recognized a tenth of a second, the world would never be the same, says Jimena Canales, an associate professor in the history of science who melds technology, philosophy, and science in this heady history.

  • Nation & World

    In their words

    Harvard students and alums share thoughts on service while doing community service work in the South.

  • Arts & Culture

    Comparative Theology: Deep Learning Across Religious Borders

    Francis X. Clooney, the Parkman Professor of Divinity and Professor of Comparative Theology, extracts wealth from his 30 years of work in comparative theology and proffers this field guide.

  • Arts & Culture

    (Re)(Organize) for Resilience: Putting Customers at the Center of Your Business

    The customer is always right, but we’re always getting taken. Ranjay Gulati, the Jaime and Josefina Chua Tiampo Professor of Business Administration, prods businesses to readjust their resilience and mend the bridge connecting consumers with companies.

  • Nation & World

    The ripple effect

    Public service at Harvard increasingly reaches well beyond its gates, as student and alumni volunteers journey far to do good works.

  • Campus & Community

    A historic year for Harvard admissions

    Harvard admits 2,110 out of more than 30,000 applicants to the Class of 2014, a 6.9 percent acceptance rate. More than 60 percent of the new students will receive need-based scholarships averaging $40,000.

  • Nation & World

    Super consumer advocate

    Elizabeth Warren, head of the Congressional Oversight Panel for the Troubled Asset Relief Program, spoke at Harvard Law School about her efforts to establish a consumer financial protection agency.

  • Science & Tech

    Women in life sciences still lag in compensation, advancement

    Women conducting research in the life sciences continue to receive lower levels of compensation than their male counterparts, even at the upper levels of academic and professional accomplishment, according to…

  • Nation & World

    Humor where it’s rarely found

    In an offbeat attempt at finding common ground, a John F. Kennedy Jr. Forum spotlights Palestinian and Israeli humor.

  • Arts & Culture

    Snapshots of China

    Art historian Claire Roberts, a Radcliffe Institute fellow, discusses photography in China, and how it was used for varied goals over time.

  • Science & Tech

    Media reporting HSPH professor to be named head of federal Medicare, Medicaid programs

    Major media outlets are this weekend reporting that President Barack Obama has selected Harvard School of Public Health (HSPH) professor Donald M. Berwick, MD, MPP,  to head the federal government’s…

  • Health

    Did rapid brain evolution make humans susceptible to Alzheimers?

    Of the millions of animals on Earth, including the relative handful that are considered the most intelligent — including apes, whales, crows, and owls — only humans experience the severe…

  • Health

    Alzheimer’s for humans only

    Disorders that result in severe neurological decline, such as Alzheimer’s disease, are not found in other animals, meaning that humans acquired their predisposition to the disease during recent evolution.

  • Campus & Community

    House masters appointed

    Harvard College Dean Evelynn M. Hammonds, announced the appointment of three House masters: Douglas Melton, Christie McDonald, and Rakesh Khurana.

  • Arts & Culture

    Performance as art

    Performance artist Andrea Fraser discussed some of the inspiration behind her work and her current installation on view at Harvard’s Carpenter Center for the Visual Arts, during a discussion at Harvard’s Barker Center.

  • Nation & World

    Forge ahead, and build your brand

    In a panel discussion celebrating the Harvard Extension School’s centennial, three speakers discuss the moribund economy, offering advice that job seekers plunge ahead and reinvent themselves to prosper in the changed marketplace.