Year: 2018
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Arts & Culture
‘Weathering Change’
Twenty-one Harvard students, faculty, staff, and alumni address climate change through poetry and art in “Weathering Change.”
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Campus & Community
Students take the lead on new climate program
A new program, led by students, will help interested professional students at Harvard engage to address climate change.
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Campus & Community
Alums return to assist and reminisce at convocation
A group of alumni volunteers return to campus to marshal the first official gathering for the Class of 2022 at the First-Year Convocation.
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Campus & Community
Bacow stays in the moment at Morning Prayers
Contemplation and reflection were foremost in the mind of Harvard President Larry Bacow during his remarks at Morning Prayers.
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Science & Tech
Data analysis could be key to success
New course brings data to a different audience as its importance continues to grow in different directions.
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Campus & Community
A warmth to beat the heat
Harvard College’s Class of 2022 filled Tercentenary Theatre on Monday for First-Year Convocation to hear lessons on fellowship and friendship, responsibility and reward that will last beyond the school year.
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Nation & World
Hundreds of experts, scholars back Harvard in admissions suit
More than 500 social scientists, 16 statisticians and economists, numerous Asian American organizations, Harvard student and alumni groups and coalitions, the American Civil Liberties Union and the Asian American Legal Defense and Education Fund filed briefs in support of the University’s admissions policies on Thursday.
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Arts & Culture
A luminous vision for Harvard Yard
Artist Teresita Fernández discusses the installation she created for Harvard Yard, “Autumn (… Nothing Personal).”
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Campus & Community
Keeping first-years informed
The Harvard program First-Year Librarians in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences is an effort to strengthen connections between students and staff.
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Science & Tech
Printing with sound
Harvard researchers have developed a new printing technology that uses sound waves to control the size of liquid droplets independent of fluid viscosity.
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Health
A telephone for your microbiome
Genetic engineering allows different species of bacteria to communicate with each other in the gut of a living mouse, setting the stage for a synthetic microbiome.
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Work & Economy
Another challenge pays off
A project that won the Harvard President’s Innovation Challenge in 2015 is poised to transform how we make emergency calls. RapidSOS is one of many student ideas brought to life with help from the President’s Challenge and the Harvard Innovation Lab.
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Science & Tech
Movement monitor
A team of researchers from the Rowland Institute at Harvard, Harvard University, and the University of Tübingen is turning to artificial intelligence technology to make it far easier than ever before to track animals’ movements in the lab.
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Science & Tech
Learning catalysts’ secrets
Cynthia Friend, who recently received a multimillion dollar grant from the U.S. Department of Energy, is well positioned to help “change the face and carbon footprint of the chemical industries sector,” one of her team’s goals.
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Campus & Community
New leadership at Lowell House
Lowell House will get new faculty deans at the end of the academic year: Nina Zipser, dean for faculty affairs and planning, and David Laibson, Robert I. Goldman Professor of Economics.
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Campus & Community
Wendy Sherman appointed professor and director at HKS
Ambassador Wendy R. Sherman, former U.S. undersecretary of state for political affairs, will join Harvard Kennedy School in January as professor of the practice of public leadership and the director of the School’s Center for Public Leadership.
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Arts & Culture
Putting a new face, and new faces, on the 1893 World’s Fair
Seeking a fuller picture of the people recruited from around the world to work in the Midway, Peabody Museum enlists student help.
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Campus & Community
Warm welcome for Class of 2022
President Larry Bacow, Dean Claudine Gay, and other Harvard leaders welcomed the Class of 2022 to campus on move-in day.
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Campus & Community
First time for first-year retreat
The pre-orientation First-Year Retreat and Experience program kicked off this week with a reception in Widener Library and an address from President Larry Bacow.
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Health
Countering college’s culture of sleeplessness
Harvard’s Class of 2022 will have taken ‘Sleep 101,’ an online module on sleep health, before they even hit campus on Aug. 27.
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Work & Economy
How to think like a gourmand
A new Harvard Business School paper says that the best way for food enthusiasts to perform like expert tasters isn’t by memorizing flavor profiles or logging more hours over the spit bucket. Instead, it involves letting go of buzzwords and making taste a visual experience.
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Health
Ending 40-year quest, scientists reveal ‘hearing’ protein
Scientists have identified the sensor protein responsible for hearing and balance, putting an end to a 40-year quest.
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Campus & Community
Reaching out to welcome diversity
The Undergraduate Minority Recruitment Program encourages high school students to consider Harvard College.
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Campus & Community
Mike Smith recalls his road traveled, and outlines path ahead
In a Q&A session, Mike Smith, who just stepped down as dean of Harvard’s Faculty of Arts and Sciences, reflects on his tenure and what may lie ahead.
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Campus & Community
Goodbye, blue blazers and rep ties
One of the last bastions of Ivy League style will be closing its Harvard Square men’s store.
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Campus & Community
A tailor-made mix
Rafael Gracioso Martins searched for a university that offered a part-time master’s degree with a mix of online and on-campus courses. He found it at the Harvard Extension School.
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Health
Cities, riders learning on fly as bike-sharing gains momentum
Harvard Chan School researcher Anne Lusk discusses the progress and potential of bike-sharing systems.