Campus & Community

All Campus & Community

  • Yes, Harvard sweats

    Known as a bastion of academe, Harvard has more Division 1 sports programs than any other college — and thousands of students in club, intramural programs.

  • No giving up

    Despite battling three injuries in three years, senior Pat Magnarelli is here to stay.

  • Beanpot bound

    Harvard women skate to Beanpot finals with 5-0 hockey win over Boston College.

  • Student concert to aid Haiti

    Harvard’s student artists, in collaboration with the OfA, pull together to produce a two-hour benefit on Feb. 12 in Sanders Theatre.

  • Michael Jensen receives AFA award

    Michael C. Jensen, the Jesse Isidor Straus Professor of Business Administration Emeritus at Harvard Business School (HBS), has received the 2009 Morgan Stanley-American Finance Association (AFA) Award for Excellence in Financial Economics.

  • Stephen Burt named National Book Critics Circle Award finalist

    Associate Professor of English Stephen Burt has been named a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle (NBCC) Award in Criticism for his book “Close Calls with Nonsense: Reading New Poetry.”

  • Shorenstein Center announces Goldsmith winners and finalists

    The Joan Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics and Public Policy at the Harvard Kennedy School (HKS) has announced two winners of the Goldsmith Books Prize and six finalists for the Goldsmith Prize for Investigative Reporting.

  • Daffodil Days in full bloom

    At Harvard, the month of February brings the promise of spring with the kick-off of Daffodil Days, a University-wide effort to raise funds to support the fight against cancer.

  • Learning beyond the gates

    Marcel Moran ’11, a biology concentrator, plans on a career in medicine. But last semester he stepped aside from problem sets and laboratory experiments to venture into a course called “Reinventing Boston: The Changing American City.”

  • Harvard upended by B.C.

    Harvard struggled to generate any offense in its Beanpot semifinal match against Boston College, losing 6-0.

  • Scientists Say Crack HIV / AIDS Puzzle For Drugs

    Scientists say they have solved a crucial puzzle about the AIDS virus after 20 years of research and that their findings could lead to better treatments for HIV…

  • Pudding Pot princess

    Actress Anne Hathaway visits Harvard for a tour, a short parade, and a Pudding Pot as Woman of the Year.

  • Faculty Council meeting, Jan. 27

    At its seventh meeting of the year on Jan. 27, the Faculty Council reviewed proposals to rename the Department of Literature and Comparative Literature and to establish a new concentration in biomedical engineering.

  • Holloway goes to Washington

    When President Obama delivers his first State of the Union address tonight (Jan. 27), Harvard freshman Janell Holloway ’13 will be watching from the first lady’s box in the U.S. House chamber.

  • Top surgeon Atul Gawande urges doctors to use ‘The Checklist’

    But surgeon Atul Gawande, who teaches at Harvard Medical School, says medicine today is so complex that even the sharpest doctors can no longer keep everything they need to know in their heads.

  • Hasty Pudding is set

    Actress Anne Hathaway will parade through Harvard Square as Hasty Pudding’s Woman of the Year this Thursday (Jan. 28). Man of the Year Justin Timberlake will be honored on Feb. 5.

  • HKS’s Belfer Center creates Ernest May Fellowship

    The Belfer Center has announced the Ernest May Fellowship, a new initiative to help build the next generation of men and women who will bring professional history to bear on strategic studies and major issues of international affairs.

  • Timberlake is Hasty’s man

    Hasty Pudding Theatricals names its 2010 Man of the Year, Justin Timberlake.

  • Harvard Stadium

    A history of Harvard Stadium and how it changed the face of American football.

  • Harvard opens Haiti relief fund

    Harvard University has established an emergency relief fund to assist employees who have been directly affected by the tragedy unfolding in Haiti.

  • Sperm Of A Feather Flock Together

    Males compete for females’ attention. It’s a pattern seen throughout the animal kingdom. But new research shows that kind of male-male competition persists even after animals have mated.

  • U.S. newborns are weighing less, study finds

    Birth weights in the United States are on the decline, a study has found. The report, released Thursday, found a small but significant decrease in average birth weights from 1990 to 2005, for reasons that scientists say are unclear…

  • Undergrads act up

    A new collaboration among the A.R.T. Institute, Harvard’s Office for the Arts, and the Harvard-Radcliffe Dramatic Club offers students an intense, three-week immersion program involving graduate-level training in the dramatic arts.

  • Overseer and Elected Director candidates announced for 2010-11

    This spring, alumni can vote for a new group of Harvard Overseers and elected directors for the Harvard Alumni Association (HAA) board.

  • Scientists use nanotech to prevent heart disease

    Scientists at MIT and Harvard Medical School yesterday announced that they teamed up to create what they’re calling “nanoburrs,” nanotechology that sticks to arteries the way that pesky burrs in the woods stick to your clothes.

  • Thrills and spills

    Allston-Brighton residents flock to new ice skating rink, which Harvard opened in a former auto garage and showroom.

  • ‘Love Story’ author Erich Segal, 72

    Erich Segal, the author of the Harvard-based novel “Love Story” and who once taught classics at the University, died of a heart attack on Jan. 17. He was 72.

  • PBHA vies for $1 million award

    The good deeds of Phillips Brooks House Association (PBHA) are being handsomely rewarded through a Facebook contest grant, and there may be more assistance in the wings.

  • Babette Whipple, former MGH psychology researcher, dies at 91

    Babette Samelson Whipple, former psychology researcher at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH), died on Dec. 18, 2009, after a short illness. She was 91.

  • Harvard College to enroll small number of transfer students

    Beginning next fall, Harvard College will resume enrolling a small number of undergraduate transfer students from other colleges and universities.  The College’s transfer program was temporarily suspended in 2008. In…