Campus & Community

All Campus & Community

  • Deep into the past

    Harvard’s traditional Phi Beta Kappa Literary Exercises showcased gifted graduates, gifted teachers, gifted members of the Class of 1965, and a poet and orator who both looked to the past to call up lessons for the future.

  • Innovation and immersion overseas

    Grants from the President’s Innovation Fund for International Experiences are helping faculty members plan and develop a suite of new study-abroad experiences for students.

  • A historical honor

    Harvard’s honorary degree recipients span history, with Benjamin Franklin, Helen Keller, John F. Kennedy, and Nelson Mandela being just a few among the hundreds over the past 364 commencements.

  • My lasting Harvard memory

    Samantha Noh ’15 shares her memorable Harvard moment, connecting to a distant student past as part of the Yard archaeology digs .

  • Words as well as drawings

    The Graduate School of Design’s Héctor Tarrido-Picart, who earned two degrees, is drawn to bustling cities, and to the literature that defines them.

  • 100 years of Widener

    The massive library, which rose after the Titanic sank, remains a linchpin of learning and conservation at Harvard.

  • Where football meets astrophysics

    Michael Mancinelli ’15 found that at Harvard he could anchor an offensive line and immerse himself in electrical engineering at the same time.

  • Commencement traditions and facts

    Test your knowledge of Commencement facts and traditions.

  • A onetime refugee aims high

    When she graduates from the Kennedy School with her master’s, onetime refugee Fadumo Dayib plans to run for president of Somalia, her homeland.

  • Photographs and memories

    Every Commencement at Harvard, the Yard fills with graduates and their families celebrating. But look closely in the front row, and you’ll see another jovial gathering. Press photographers from all over the region flock to the Yard to immortalize the regalia and traditions in Tercentenary Theatre. For the Boston press corps, noted for its collegiality, it’s a reunion of sorts.

  • Ode to a venerable library

    Narrated by John Lithgow ’67, this visual love letter to libraries celebrates books and those who watch over them while marking the 100th anniversary of the opening of the Harry Elkins Widener Memorial Library, Harvard’s flagship library.

  • Finding HARMONY

    HARMONY — one of Phillips Brooks House Association’s more than 70 volunteer programs — provides instrumental and vocal instruction for children in the Cambridge Public Schools.

  • When your calling comes calling

    Megan Diamond took a few years to decide on a path in public health. After working overseas investigating health in Africa, the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health graduate is looking forward to continuing her work in global health.

  • United in grief and action

    Harvard students with ties to Nepal have joined a multicampus response to the devastation wrought by two major earthquakes.

  • Ahead of her time

    Saheela Ibraheem has always been ahead of her time and is graduating from Harvard College this spring at just 20, a neurobiology concentrator who is looking forward to pursuing a career in academia.

  • Strong enrollment for Class of 2019

    Nearly 81 percent of the students admitted to the Class of 2019 plan to enroll in August. Last year, 80.9 percent matriculated; 81 percent did so the year before. The last time Harvard’s yield on admitted students reached these levels was 1969 for the Class of 1973.

  • Seal of approval

    Harvard’s motto, Veritas, has a long — and for two centuries, invisible — history.

  • A new dean for SEAS

    Francis J. Doyle III, a distinguished scholar in chemical engineering at the University of California, Santa Barbara (UCSB), has been appointed the next dean of the Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS) and will take the reins on Aug. 1.

  • A Crimson kind of town

    Amid a discussion probing inequality, the Your Harvard series celebrates the University’s ties to Chicago.

  • Life under the lights and in the lab

    Talented actress and singer Elizabeth Leimkuhler divided her time at Harvard between her love for the stage and her love for all creatures, great and small.

  • Not your average science fair

    At the fourth annual School of Engineering and Applied Sciences Design and Project Fair, hundreds of students representing 18 Harvard courses presented projects.

  • Scholarship of things

    Addressing an audience at the Harvard Ed Portal, Laurel Thatcher Ulrich, the 300th Anniversary University Professor and a Pulitzer Prize winner for history, said that many objects in Harvard’s collections defy easy categorization. Consider, she said, the tortilla.

  • Great adventures

    Students in “The Humanities Colloquium: Essential Works 2” received an education both in and out of the classroom.

  • ‘A completely new life was beckoning’

    Interview with Gerald Holton as part of the Experience series.

  • Two honored for teaching excellence

    Ruth Bielfeldt, Harris K. Weston Associate Professor of the Humanities, and Sarah Richardson, John L. Loeb Associate Professor of the Social Sciences, are this year’s winners of the Roslyn Abramson Award, given annually to assistant or associate professors for excellence in undergraduate teaching.

  • Harvard faculty elected to NAS

    Seven Harvard faculty members were elected to the National Academy of Sciences.

  • Arts First, and at center

    Arts First, Harvard’s spring weekend festival, embraces creativity, audience participation.

  • Charles Preston Whitlock service held

    Former Harvard College Dean Charles Preston Whitlock died on April 27 after a brief illness. He was 95. A memorial service will be held May 2.

  • Faculty Council meeting held April 29

    On April 29 the members of the Faculty Council approved preliminary versions of the University Extension School courses for 2015-16 and Courses of Instruction for 2015-16.

  • Long hitting the high notes

    Harvard’s Lowell House Opera is the longest continually performing opera company in New England.