All articles


  • Campus & Community

    Strong effort by Crimson not enough

    Mikaelle Comrie, Taylor Docter, and Anne Carroll Ingersoll each had 14 kills on Sept. 8 against UConn, but the Crimson still fell to the Huskies in five sets by a score of 3-2.

  • Campus & Community

    Donations to cancer institute hit $1b

    A Dana-Farber Cancer Institute fund-raising campaign has hit the $1 billion mark a year earlier than expected – despite the ragged economy – setting what is believed to be a record for New England health care institutions. The drive’s success, which will be announced today, appears to have few national parallels, although at least one…

  • Campus & Community

    Harvard students fight foreclosures

    Harvard Business School students have joined the fight against foreclosures. The Homeownership Preservation Foundation has teamed up with Harvard MBA students to support the nonprofit’s mission of preventing foreclosure and preserving homeownership.

  • Campus & Community

    Sharing ‘Justice’ with the world

    Harvard University has teamed up with WGBH Boston to produce a new television series and interactive Web site that will take viewers inside one of the University’s most popular courses. “Justice” will premiere on public television stations nationwide in mid-September.

  • Campus & Community

    Hasty Pudding Club Forms at Harvard: September 8, 1795

    On this day in 1795, 21 Harvard students gathered in a dorm room and formed a secret social club to cultivate “friendship and patriotism.” Members agreed to take turns providing a pot of hasty pudding for the meetings. Thus did the Hasty Pudding Club, the nation’s oldest dramatic institution, get its name…

  • Campus & Community

    Insured, but Bankrupted Anyway

    Dr. David Himmelstein is an associate professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School and a primary care doctor at the Cambridge Hospital in Massachusetts. “Our most recent study found that nearly two-thirds of Americans who declared bankruptcy cited illness or medical bills as a significant cause of their bankruptcies. And of the medically bankrupt, three-quarters…

  • Campus & Community

    Being young, here, now

    Harvard’s Humanist Chaplaincy, a community for agnostics, atheists, and the nonreligious, started a free, open-to-all group this year that practices different forms of meditation, including Buddhist and Quaker, said Zachary Alexander, 26, the group’s founder.

  • Campus & Community

    Oklahoman’s book project archive Harvard-bound

    The university’s Houghton Library recently purchased the archive he developed for his 1989 book, “What Should We Tell Our Children About Vietnam?” “It is still hard for me to believe that something that came from my head and hands will end up being preserved forever between the walls of such a great institution,” said McCloud,…

  • Campus & Community

    PCB risk feared at older N.E. schools

    “It’s contradictory . . . because you don’t have to test, but if you do and you find it over 50 parts per million, then this whole cascade of regulatory requirements kicks in,’’ said Robert Herrick, senior lecturer at the Harvard School of Public Health…

  • Campus & Community

    Welcoming Gen Ed

    In a celebratory forum in Lowell Lecture Hall Sept. 3, Harvard President Drew Faust and others explain and extol Harvard’s new General Education requirements, which take effect this year with the Class of 2013.

  • Nation & World

    Public service gets personal

    Four HKS graduates took part in a panel on public service on Sept 2. The alumni discussed their time at HKS and their work in both the public and private sectors.

  • Campus & Community

    Harvard opens its research repository

    Harvard University this week unveiled its open database of faculty research, with more than a third of its arts and sciences faculty members participating so far. Since the faculty of the main undergraduate college voted in February 2008 to support the system known as Digital Access to Scholarship at Harvard, in which professors’ scholarly works…

  • Campus & Community

    Medical grants a boon for Mass.

    Massachusetts biomedical researchers are seeing a windfall from federal stimulus money, with the state receiving more in grants from the National Institutes of Health than all others but California.

  • Campus & Community

    Louis Byington Barnes, 81, Harvard professor, author

    Louis Byington Barnes’s practice of focused attention to speech was probably born out of his lengthy and accomplished teaching career, a legacy built on his personal mantra that teaching is, “the discipline of listening extra carefully before making interventions in the discussion.’’ He died Aug. 22 at Eastern Maine Medical Center in Bangor.

  • Campus & Community

    Memorial service for Dean Tosteson

    A memorial service will for Daniel Tosteson will be held at the Memorial Church, Harvard Yard, on Sept. 30 at 3 p.m.

  • Arts & Culture

    The Origins of Canadian and American Political Differences

    Guns, government, same-sex marriage — the U.S. and Canada couldn’t be more dissimilar. Kaufman explores the history and culture of the two lands and asks why Canada is so close, yet so far away.

  • Arts & Culture

    How Professors Think: Inside the Curious World of Academic Judgment

    Lamont tells all in this behind-the-scenes work on the mysterious underpinnings of academia. Be in the room when the greatest thinkers meet behind closed doors and talk about how excellent excellence is.

  • Arts & Culture

    Human Documents: Eight Photographers

    Media maestro Robert Gardner presents this stunning array of photographs, or, “human documents,” which explore geography, culture, and our shared humanity through a universal visual language.

  • Science & Tech

    Building human cooperation: Carrots work better

    Rewards go further than punishment in building human cooperation and benefiting the common good, according to research published in the journal Science by researchers at Harvard University and the Stockholm School of Economics.

  • Campus & Community

    Faculty Council meeting, Sept. 2

    At its first meeting of the year on Sept. 2, the Faculty Council welcomed new members, elected subcommittees for 2009-2010, and discussed the work of the Council in the new…

  • Campus & Community

    Move-in Day

    Harvard Rituals, a view into traditions across the University.

  • Campus & Community

    New Application Aims to Detect Flu Outbreaks Faster

    In the latest use of the Internet and social media to counter the flu and infectious diseases, researchers from MIT and Harvard said Tuesday that iPhone users have a new means of monitoring the spread of swine flu and other disease outbreaks.

  • Campus & Community

    Around the Schools: Faculty of Arts and Sciences

    Astronomers at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics discovered a record-breaking gamma-ray burst located 13 billion light-years from Earth.

  • Campus & Community

    Around the Schools: Harvard Kennedy School

    The Hauser Center for Nonprofit Organizations will convene a Consultative Conference on International Criminal Justice at United Nations headquarters in Manhattan Sept. 9-11.

  • Campus & Community

    Harvard attorney Frank J. Connors Jr. passes away

    Frank J. Connors Jr., an in-house attorney at Harvard for the past 24 years, died on Aug. 14.

  • Campus & Community

    Around the Schools: Harvard University Extension School

    The Harvard University Extension School will celebrate its centennial anniversary this fall. A private convocation will be held Sept. 25, and a public panel on the future of technology is slated for Nov. 18.

  • Campus & Community

    Around the Schools: Harvard Divinity School

    On Sept. 10, at 4:30 p.m., a cow will cross the Yard — in celebration of the achievements of Hollis Professor of Divinity Harvey Cox, who retired in June.

  • Campus & Community

    Harvard police officer Burke dies

    Alfred Lee Burke, Harvard University police officer for more than 30 years, died on Aug. 10 at the age of 68.

  • Health

    Concentrating on stem cells

    New concentration is the latest example of the University’s commitment to and pre-eminence in the promising field of stem cell research.

  • Campus & Community

    Professor of orthodontics Lebret dies at 92

    Laure Lebret, former associate professor of orthodontics at Harvard School of Dental Medicine, died on Aug. 23 at the age of 92.