Campus & Community

All Campus & Community

  • Breaking ground with new degree

    Juan Reynoso will be the second Harvard student to have completed a new joint Master in Public Health/Master in Urban Planning degree program.

    Juan Reynoso.
  • Erin McDermott named athletic director

    Erin McDermott has been named the John D. Nichols ’53 Family Director of Athletics, Harvard announced today.

    Erin McDermott portrait.
  • Adding it all up

    Akshaya Annapragada, who will graduate with an A.B. in applied mathematics and an S.M. in engineering sciences-bioengineering, with a secondary in global health and health policy at the John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, arrived at Harvard eager to develop better medical tools.

    Akshaya Annapragada.
  • Colson Whitehead ’91 wins Pulitzer Prize for fiction

    Novelist Colson Whitehead joins William Faulkner, John Updike, and Booth Tarkington as the fourth to garner the Pulitzer Prize for fiction award twice.

    Colson Whitehead.
  • Helping to feed the community

    Harvard University Dining Services has emptied its freezers and storerooms to provide food to area nonprofit grocery programs.

    Food on counter.
  • Five faculty members named Harvard College Professors

    Five faculty members have been named Harvard College Professors for their contributions to undergraduate teaching.

    Gate Outside of Emerson Hall at Harvard.
  • New faculty: David Joselit

    David Joselit joined the department of Art, Film, and Visual Studies this semester as a professor of visual studies.

    David Joselit.
  • A time of need and a desire to help

    COVID-19 spurs inspiration in student volunteers who find ways to make a difference amid the pandemic’s disruption and loss

    Delivering meals to a hospital in NYC.
  • Two named to lead Overseers

    Martin Chávez and Beth Karlan to occupy senior posts on Harvard University’s Board of Overseers for the 2020–21 academic year.

    Loeb House with 1908 gate.
  • Life at a distance

    How Harvard faculty and staff continue to adapt to social distancing as they stay the course.

    Lisa Albert and Matthew Tuttle at their Zoom wedding.
  • From patient to front lines

    Meet Katie Klatt — pediatric intensive care unit nurse, M.P.H. student at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, and recovered COVID-19 patient.

    Katie Klatt.
  • Respected teacher and administrator Richard M. Hunt dies at 93

    Richard McMasters Hunt, a faculty member in social studies for 42 years and University Marshal for two decades, died on April 10 at the age of 93.

    Rick Hunt and Nelson Mandela.
  • Studying COVID-19 in real time

    How some Harvard professors are integrating the coronavirus crisis into their curricula.

    Daniel Lieberman.
  • Harvard, by the books

    It didn’t turn out at all the way they thought it would. Being asked to quickly leave campus and return home last month amid the mushrooming coronavirus outbreak was painful…

    Old book with original Harvard Veritas design.
  • Harvard launches emergency grant program for Allston-Brighton

    Harvard has launched a new grant program that will provide emergency funding to nonprofit organizations responding to COVID-19-related community needs serving the Allston-Brighton neighborhood of Boston.

    Allston Brighton street sign.
  • Finding creative ways to maintain campus bonds remotely

    Campus friend groups remain close, even if not geographically. So they’ve had to make adjustments to keep in touch.

    Illustration of laptops projecting 3D campus model.
  • From taking notes in the classroom to helping the front lines

    Students in Mark Fagan’s supply chain management course spent the spring semester using their skills to help the front lines of the COVID-19 crisis.

    Mark Fagan.
  • New members of the American Academy Arts & Sciences announced

    The American Academy of Arts & Sciences announced its newest members, which include 15 members of Harvard faculty and staff.

    Harvard crest.
  • New dean for School of Dental Medicine

    William V. Giannobile, an alumnus of the Harvard School of Dental Medicine, has been named its new dean. An expert in periodontics and oral medicine, Giannobile succeeds Bruce Donoff, who stepped down from the post in 2019 after 28 years.

    William V. Giannobile.
  • History at your fingertips

    The first Harvard Library-wide crowdsourcing transcription project is seeking volunteers to help transcribe the handwritten materials from the University’s 18th-century North America Collection.

    A poem from mid-1700s.
  • Dancing with myself

    Virtual workout classes help the community stay connected and healthy while social distancing.

    Online Zumba class with Sandra Kim.
  • Why the Arboretum remains open

    Director William “Ned” Friedman explains the rationale for keeping the Arboretum open during the pandemic.

    William "Ned" Friedman.
  • Want us to invest? Or to keep our investment? Get greener

    John Campbell discusses Harvard’s new plan to have its endowment reflect net-zero greenhouse-gas emissions by 2050.

    John Campbell.
  • President’s Innovation Challenge taps students’ ingenuity

    Harvard Innovation Labs announced the 2020 President’s Innovation Challenge finalists who will be awarded a total of $510,000 at a virtual ceremony in May.

    Women from the Studio speaking.
  • Extracurriculars for an online campus

    Socialize Remotely allows students, faculty, and staff to continue attending a range of extracurricular activities, and to connect.

    Woman doing yoga in front of laptop.
  • Harvard endowment to go greenhouse gas-neutral by 2050

    In an announcement Tuesday, Harvard signaled its expanding commitment to attacking climate change with a dramatic new pledge to drastically reduce emissions in its investment portfolio so Harvard’s endowment can achieve “net-zero” emissions by 2050.

    Harvard Yard.
  • New committee to advise Bacow on sustainability goals

    Members of the new Presidential Committee on Sustainability discuss why it is so important to act now to address climate change, the committee’s role in developing collaborative and innovative projects, and how community members can get involved.

    A stand of pine trees.
  • If Harvard were to reopen today, who should be allowed to return?

    Harvard Professor Michael Sandel led a campuswide audience in a Zoom event, “Harvard Live: Pandemic Ethics.”

    Michael Sandel.
  • So what have you been up to?

    The Gazette reached out to members of the Harvard community as they entered their second month of social isolation to find out what they are reading, watching, doing, and listening to in the age of coronavirus.

    "Edge of Town" by Jessica Brilli.
  • Explore Widener in all its glory, from your desk or phone

    Explore Harvard’s Widener Library, from its marble rotunda to the Loker Reading Room, through a new 360-degree virtual tour.

    Widener Library exterior.