Year: 2018

  • Nation & World

    Zeroing in on long-term weight loss

    The types of calories consumed may influence how likely you are to keep that weight off for the long term, according to a Harvard study.

    5 minutes
    woman feet standing on weigh scales,
  • Nation & World

    Picturing early Mars

    Professor Robin Wordsworth explains why the just-announced landing site for the 2020 Mars rover mission has a lot to offer SEAS researchers.

    2 minutes
    Jezero Crater.
  • Nation & World

    Yeasts get a boost from solar power

    Harvard researchers have started to combine bacteria with semiconductor technology that, similar to solar panels on a roof, harvests energy from light and, when coupled to the microbes’ surface, boosts their biosynthetic potential.

    5 minutes
    Yeast Molecules
  • Nation & World

    Harvard forms subsidiary to advance Enterprise Research Campus

    Harvard has announced the formation of a new subsidiary, headed by HBS Dean Nitin Nohria and former Massport CEO Thomas Glynn, to begin development of its Enterprise Research Campus in Allston.

    12 minutes
    Tom Glynn and Dean Nitin Nohria.
  • Nation & World

    Christopher Stubbs named dean of science

    Christopher Stubbs, the Samuel C. Moncher Professor of Physics and of Astronomy, has been appointed dean of science by FAS Dean Claudine Gay.

    11 minutes
    Christopher Stubbs
  • Nation & World

    John Kerry, still in the game

    During a visit to Harvard, former Secretary of State John Kerry encourages students to do more than show up to vote: to take action.

    7 minutes
    John Kerry and IOP fellows
  • Nation & World

    Reflections of an envoy

    During a Harvard visit, Caroline Kennedy recalls her years as ambassador to Japan, including President Obama’s trip to Hiroshima.

    4 minutes
    Caroline Kennedy
  • Nation & World

    The difference a year makes

    A Harvard study has found that children born in August in states with a Sept. 1 cutoff birth date for school enrollment have a 30 percent higher risk for ADHD diagnosis than peers born in September, which may reflect overdiagnosis.

    6 minutes
    Little boy is doing handprint
  • Nation & World

    A day in the life

    Ana Osorio is a custodian working at Harvard Business School, where she is in charge of cleaning the common spaces at McArthur Hall, which provides residence and learning spaces for visiting business leaders from around the world. A reporter follows her through her day.

    8 minutes
    Ana Osorio adds sugar to her coffee cup.
  • Nation & World

    Catching up with the Class of ’48

    Photo gallery profiles six Harvard alumni over 90 who show no sign of slowing down.

    5 minutes
  • Nation & World

    Cultivating a wider role for women scientists

    A tiny seed has already changed the careers of the Arnold Arboretum’s Tiffany Enzenbacher and Kea Woodruff, and it may one day bear fruit in an example of flora rescued from extinction— and a growing space for women in science.

    7 minutes
  • Nation & World

    A major test for dietary supplements

    Medical School professor and VITAL lead researcher JoAnn Manson details results from a large probe of vitamin D and omega-3 as possible disease fighters.

    7 minutes
    JoAnn Manson .
  • Nation & World

    Taking it all personally

    Now through Dec. 30 at Harvard’s Carpenter Center for Visual Arts, a series of photos shines a light on the America that author and social critic James Baldwin was responding to with his words. “Time is Now: Photography and Social Change in James Baldwin’s America” tracks the social unrest that drove his writing and reflect…

    5 minutes
    Vietnam War protesters march in Chicago in 1968 holding sign reading "Unite or perish."
  • Nation & World

    Learning while leading at Harvard Law Review

    Michael Thomas Jr. is the third African-American man elected president of the Harvard Law Review. Barack Obama was the first.

    4 minutes
    Michael Thomas Jr.
  • Nation & World

    Celebrating a decade of musical theater

    The American Repertory Theater’s production of “ExtraOrdinary” samples a decade of musicals while tapping into performers’ stories.

    4 minutes
    ExtraOrdinaryOpeningNight
  • Nation & World

    The machinery to drive ed reform

    In an interview, Harvard’s Paul Reville explains the goals of an upcoming conference that invites mayors, school officials, and community leaders to discuss how to drive meaningful educational reform.

    4 minutes
    Illustration of young girl with abacus inside of head.
  • Nation & World

    Much to be thankful for

    Giving Thanks Open House allows Harvard community to share its message among colleagues and support the Harvard Square Homeless Shelter.

    2 minutes
    Maggie Kiley
  • Nation & World

    A prophet of peace

    An interview with Juan Manuel Santos, former president of Colombia and 2016 Peace Prize winner for his efforts to negotiate an agreement that ended a 50-year-long internal conflict and brought peace to Colombia.

    9 minutes
    Juan Manuel Santos.
  • Nation & World

    A fond faculty farewell

    Harvard President Bacow, former leader Faust headline a faculty sendoff for former Dean Michael Smith of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences.

    4 minutes
    Michael D. Smith waves goodbye at a faculty sendoff.
  • Nation & World

    Learning to talk about race in the workplace

    Allison Manswell, author of “Listen In: Crucial Conversations on Race in the Workplace,” spoke at Harvard as part of its Faculty of Arts and Sciences Diversity Dialogue series.

    3 minutes
    Allison Manswell
  • Nation & World

    Breathing uneasily

    The Gazette talked to Joe Allen of the Harvard Chan School about the health threats posed by wildfire smoke in California.

    7 minutes
    Massive plume from the Camp Fire wafts over the Sacramento Valley.
  • Nation & World

    The ongoing tragedy of lead in our lives

    The water crisis in Flint, Mich., has been a recent focal point, but the issue of lead pollution is both global and pervasive. Harvard conference focuses on the ongoing tragedy of lead in our lives.

    5 minutes
    Michael McCormick speaks.
  • Nation & World

    One election winner: the pollsters

    It’s debatable whether the midterm elections delivered a demonstrably better night for Democrats than Republicans. But it was inarguably a big win for pollsters, says FiveThirtyEight founder Nate Silver at Harvard’s Political Analytics Conference.

    4 minutes
    Moderator Kirk Goldsberry and panelists Nate Cohn and Amanda Cox.
  • Nation & World

    Playing The Game, both past and present

    Photo gallery of scenes from the 135th playing of The Game, Harvard-Yale football at Fenway Park.

    4 minutes
  • Nation & World

    Critical collections

    Harvard researchers contribute to the preservation of museum specimens, marking the collections’ importance in a special journal released Nov. 19.

    5 minutes
    Charles Davis
  • Nation & World

    Back to Myanmar with fresh insights

    Yee Htun, a Myanmar native who immigrated to Canada as a refugee and returned to work as a human rights lawyer in her native country, now teaches human rights advocacy at Harvard Law School.

    4 minutes
    Yee Htun.
  • Nation & World

    Funny, creepy, or both?

    “The Laughing Room,” brainchild of Harvard metaLab researcher Jonny Sun, uses an algorithm to turn library visitors into performers.

    3 minutes
    In 'Laughing Room' installation, people sit on couches, laughing.
  • Nation & World

    Something weird this way comes

    A paper by Harvard researchers wonders whether the interstellar object known as “‘Oumuamua” is a visitor from an alien civilization.

    5 minutes
    Artist's rendering of 'Oumuamua.
  • Nation & World

    The thrill of winning a Rhodes

    Two Harvard undergraduates, Jin Park and Brittany Ellis, are among the 32 American men and women chosen as Rhodes Scholars on Saturday. They will begin their studies at the University of Oxford next October.

    4 minutes
  • Nation & World

    Harvard beats Yale 45-27

    In the 135th playing of The Game, the Harvard football team (6-4, 4-3 Ivy) bested the Yale Bulldogs (5-5, 3-4 Ivy) in a commanding 45-27 victory at the historic Fenway Park today. Harvard’s victory in the colosseum of champions snaps Yale’s two-game winning streak in The Game.

    1 minute
    Harvard-Yale Game