Campus & Community

All Campus & Community

  • My grandpa’s 100 hats

    Shannon Freyer, an animal-care technician in Harvard’s Department of Stem Cell and Regenerative Biology, shares stories about her grandfather, who died on his 86th birthday due to COVID-19.

    Shannon Freyer with siblings and her grandpa.
  • Kevin Young to speak at 151st meeting of Alumni Association

    Celebrated poet Kevin Young ’92 will give the address at the 151st Harvard Alumni Association Annual Meeting. Young is the director of the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and Culture.

    Kevin Young '92
  • A taste of the old normal

    Since the start of April, about 200 students, faculty, and staff have been taking part in a monthlong, in-person-and-virtual hybrid learning pilot for the Faculty of Arts and Sciences.

    Nathan Reiff conducts Harvard Glee Club
  • A year of ‘never off’

    As director of the Harvard Healthy Buildings Program at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Joseph G. Allen offers special insight on how the pandemic affected him, his work, and his family.

    Joseph Allen and his family.
  • New, improved, and almost open

    With renovations complete, accessibility enhanced, and new collections to show off, staff at the Houghton Library look forward to welcoming visitors again.

    Houghton Library exterior shot.
  • Smile for the birdie

    Harvard Professor Gonzalo Giribet takes on bird photography as pandemic hobby.

    Giribet Gonzalo taking a photo.
  • A teacher for 40 years and a neighborhood ‘den mother’

    Ronald Chandler remembers his mother, Carol Marie Chandler.

    RonaldChandler's parents.
  • Three alumni to receive 2021 Harvard Medal

    The Harvard Alumni Association (HAA) announced that Walter K. Clair ’77, M.D. ’81, M.P.H. ’85, Nancy-Beth Gordon Sheerr ’71, and Preston N. Williams, Ph.D. ’67, will receive the 2021 Harvard Medal. The awards will be presented virtually to the 2021 and 2020 recipients at the association’s annual meeting on June 4.

    Widener Library.
  • Preservation in a pandemic — and beyond

    Preservation Services Director Brenda Bernier discusses preservation during a pandemic — and what comes next.

    Preservation work.
  • Tindal named director of Harvard Museums of Science and Culture

    Brenda Tindal, an award-winning educator and scholar from the International African American Museum in Charleston, S.C., has been named executive director of Harvard Museums of Science and Culture. Tindal will begin her new position May 17.

    Brenda Tindal
  • The best from the brightest

    Twenty-five venture initiatives will compete for more than half a million dollars in prizes in the 2021 President’s Innovation Challenge.

    Laura Kelley holding a Hi sign.
  • ‘The full COVID-19 experience’

    Gazette senior science writer Alvin Powell shares his view on the complexities of dealing with death amid pandemic, coupled with a profile of his colorful, fiercely independent, oft-married, world traveler mom who succumbed to COVID-19 last spring.

    Al Powell by his mothers bedside.
  • Devah Pager, 46

    At a Meeting of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences on April 6, 2021, the Minute honoring the life and service of the late Devah Pager, Professor of Sociology, was placed upon the records. Pager was renowned for her research on hiring discrimination and the consequences of mass incarceration.

  • 1,968 total accepted to the Class of 2025 as regular-decision letters go out

    Harvard College has offered admission to 1,223 applicants for the Class of 2025 through its regular-action program, with 1,968 admitted in total, including those selected in the early action process. The total number of applications for the Class of 2025 was 57,435, a marked increase from 40,248 for the Class of 2024.

    Harvard Gate.
  • Harvard journal speaks to publishers’ association

    Harvard Data Science named best new journal in science.

    Science illustration.
  • A table set for two

    Kathy Santoro, director of HR Programs and Operations for the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, remembers time spent with her mother before losing her to COVID-19.

    Kathy Santoro
  • Where’s Super Mario?

    Mario Leon picked up the nickname Super Mario as a sign of affection over his lengthy tenure as the warm, helpful building manager at Pforzheimer House.

    Mario Leon
  • Navigating the Yard

    Alyssa Goodman’s class in predictive systems took 28 students all over Harvard Yard as they followed the same directions.

    Neil Khurana, '22
  • Where the wild things are

    Capturing the creatures that grace Harvard’s buildings, gates, and shields

    Lion statue.
  • Harvard creates Office for Gender Equity

    Harvard is forming a new Office for Gender Equity that will bring together resources previously housed in the Office of Sexual Assault Prevention and Response (OSAPR) and the Title IX Office. The new office will be headed by Title IX coordinator Nicole Merhill.

    Harvard University.
  • For Harvard police, a renewed focus on community, communications

    The Gazette spoke with Denis Downing about how Harvard University Police Department has implemented the recommendations of 21CP Solutions’ review, and what he hopes to accomplish before a new chief is appointed.

    Denis Downing.
  • Harvard plans full return to campus life

    The Harvard Faculty of Arts and Sciences is planning for a full return to campus in the fall, including opening residential accommodations at full density and holding classes in person.

    Fall views of Widener Library at Harvard University. S
  • Open access

    “Science Rehashed” aims to increase accessibility to the latest scientific research.

    An illustration of the Science Rehashed team.
  • Science and Engineering Complex named one of the world’s healthiest lab buildings

    New lab complex will help Harvard progress toward its Sustainability Plan and achieve its goals to be fossil fuel-neutral by 2026 and fossil fuel-free by 2050.

    SEC campus.
  • Where Health Services stands with COVID vaccine

    University Health Services awaits increase supply of vaccines, indicating it has the ability to administer twice the number of vaccines to the Harvard community.

    Giang Nguyen and Paul Biddinger
  • A chance to help work work better

    The President’s Administrative Innovation Fund is looking for staff solutions to administrative challenges, centered on the future of work.

    Massachusetts Hall at Harvard
  • Harvard president reflects on past year, and looks ahead

    Harvard President Larry Bacow reflects on how the Harvard community has met the challenges posed by COVID-19, and to look ahead how the University is tackling some of the world’s most pressing problems.

    Larry Bacow.
  • The value of the written word

    Peer Advising Fellow pen pals help Harvard first-years fit in — even from afar.

    Frances Hisgen '21,
  • ‘We’re so much more than our day job’

    The first Harvard Staff Art Show featured more than 280 pieces by 167 artists who work in other positions at the University

    Drawing Leap with pencil and paper.
  • The House that will be home

    On Housing Day, first-year students learn where they will spend their next years at Harvard, and the Houses are as varied as the residents who inhabit them.

    Kirkland House is reflected in the windows of Winthrop House.