Campus & Community

All Campus & Community

  • Three students tell it like it was (and will be)

    Students will share their memories of Harvard, lessons learned, and hopes for the future in three traditional addresses on Commencement Day.

    Kabir Gandhi talking outside
  • Changing trajectory

    After Harvard wait-listed him, Dylan Wile had made plans to attend another university. A call from an admissions officer changed everything.

    Dylan Wile portrait
  • Ready for takeoff

    Air Force major and new parent Bradley DeWees completed his doctorate at Harvard’s Kennedy School in just three years.

    Bradley DeWees in Memorial Church.
  • Future M.D.’s passion to help comes in many forms

    Cynthia Luo, who’s concentrating in both molecular and cellular biology and English, was inspired by her time in Uganda to become a physician and improve global health.

    Cynthia Luo in front of stairs
  • ‘Adventuring with purpose’

    Harvard’s Liz Roux could look back on sorrow and tragedy, but she runs looking ahead, at adventures and opportunities and people to encourage her.

    Roux in a tree
  • Choctaw Nation’s Burrage thrives at Harvard

    Truman Burrage is a stellar graduating senior, an Oklahoma native, and a member of the Choctaw Nation who has been admitted to Harvard Law School.

    Truman Burrage maintained his Oklahoma roots while at Harvard.
  • Reflections of a president, one year in

    In an interview, Harvard President Larry Bacow reflects on his first year in office, the importance of truth as a principle, his commitment to public service, and what he’s most looking forward to during his first Commencement as the University’s leader.

    Larry and Adele Bacow standing on their porch of their Elmwood home.
  • Fighting for humane mental health treatment

    Faraaz Mahomed, of the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, is working to protect the rights of those using mental health systems throughout the world.

    Faraaz Mahomed in an office
  • Picturing history through a personal lens

    Wonik Son has examined post-World War II humanitarian images for what they say about injury and disability and where they fit into history, including his own.

    Wonik Son at the library discussing his four years at Harvard.
  • Giving to the next generation

    Professor Catherine Dulac used the money from her endowed position to fund the studies of an overloaded neuroscience undergrad.

    student and professor in the lab
  • Life in the fast lane

    Aurora Straus, a race-car driver and Harvard first-year, is a role model for girls but still encounters sexism around the track.

    Split screen of Aurora Straus, half, in her racing gear and at Harvard.
  • A justice reformer

    Dominique Erney witnessed criminal justice too close to her family, and graduates prepared to fight for reform in the system.

    Dominique Erney looking up from behind glass
  • Breyer to step down from Harvard Corporation

    Venture capitalist James Breyer, M.B.A. ’87, will step down from the Harvard Corporation on June 30 after serving for six years.

    James Breyer (left) and Michael Bloomberg
  • Places we love

    Harvard students, professors, alumni, and staff talk about the places on campus they love most.

    Harvard square as seen from above
  • Reframing cultures

    Throughout her time at Harvard, Mahnoor Ali has been devoted to exploring intercultural relations and expanding dialogue.

    Ali standing in the Harvard Art Museums
  • Peabody’s incoming director shares strategies for new era in museum work

    Jane Pickering, executive director of the Harvard Museums of Science and Culture, will become the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology’s director on July 1.

    Jane Pickering
  • Parsing the data — together

    Data, and conversations about its management and fair use, took center stage at the ninth annual Harvard IT Summit last week, held on the campus of Harvard Business School.

    auditorium
  • The long, deep ties between Harvard and Germany

    In advance of Angela Merkel’s visit, the Gazette looked at a number of key episodes between Germany and Harvard throughout the 19th and 20th centuries.

    Shadow of bronze lion casts shadow on the wall at Busch Hall garden.
  • Four deans, and their journeys

    Four Harvard deans discuss their role models and their work as top administrators.

    Four Harvard deans
  • Opening the door for scientific leaps

    The projects range from making one the world’s smallest flying machines to opening a new lane of research in the study of climate change to developing a groundbreaking technology that conducts electricity with 100 percent efficiency to an investigation of how environmental change affects bees.

    Man giving presentation
  • Pickering named director of Peabody Museum

    Jane Pickering has been named the William and Muriel Seabury Howells Director of Harvard’s Peabody Museum of Archaeology & Ethnology. She will begin her five-year term July 1.

    Jane Pickering
  • Finding rhythm in reverence

    M.Div. candidate Aric Flemming is taking a year off to immerse himself in music, both spiritual and secular.

    Aric Flemming in a priest's gown standing in church
  • Heading to Hungary to study and help

    Sara Bobok returns repeatedly to her native Hungary, where she’ll next study sex trafficking, aiming to make an impact on the country’s young people.

    Sara Bobok ’19 standing in a courtyard
  • Whew, that’s done!

    One of Harvard’s rites of passage is to write a thesis. Students and administrators talk about the process, the requirements, and the ordeal of undertaking an independent project that is unlike any other in students’ College years.

    David Shayne, from left, Juliana Rodriguez, and Trevor Levin, senior concentrators in Social Studies handed in their thesis on "Thesis Day."
  • Focusing on people and place

    Alice Hill will be the first Australian and the first Canadian to lead the HAA, as well as the first from the Asia Pacific region. She plans to bring those perspectives to the table as president.

  • Best in high gear

    While she was earning a master’s at HGSE, Nicole Johnson worked four jobs, was vice president of the HGSE Student Council, and won the Miss Massachusetts International Pageant.

    Nicole Johnson was just crowned Miss Massachusetts International.
  • Inviting the community into design, decisions

    In England, Rhodes Scholar Brittany Ellis will continue to promote collaboration between museums and communities in curatorial decision-making.

    Brittany Ellis '19 at the Peabody Museum
  • Searching for answers in what lemurs leave behind

    Harvard College senior Camille DeSisto’s love of the environment took her around the world to Madagascar’s tropical forests.

    Harvard College graduate Camille DeSisto
  • A worm named Peanut

    Kindergarten through fifth grade Boston Public School students become “Young Scientists” for a day through the Arnold Arboretum’s Field Study Experiences program.

    children lying on the grass
  • Mistaken identities

    Both graduating this May, the two Cat Zhangs weigh in on four years of being confused with each other and the respective legacies they leave behind.

    Cat L. Zhang former president of UC, on right, and Cat Y. Zhang