Campus & Community

All Campus & Community

  • High-Risk, High-Reward grants for nine Harvard researchers

    Harvard scientists receive prestigious grant funding through NIH program.

    Microcentrifuge tubes in a rack.
  • From one Nobel laureate to another

    Via a tweet, Harvard professor and Nobel laureate Jack Szostak congratulated former student Jennifer Doudna, who won the Nobel in chemistry on Wednesday.

    Jennifer Doudna.
  • Pulled to the polls

    The Harvard Votes Challenge has recruited more than 150 affiliates to work the polls as part of its partnership with the Safe Elections Network and Power to the Polls. The Gazette spoke to a handful of students and staff about why they decided to get involved.

    People voting.
  • John Tate, 94

    At a Meeting of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences on October 6, 2020, the Minute honoring the life and service of the late John Torrence Tate, Jr., Perkins Professor of Mathematics, Emeritus, was placed upon the records. Professor Tate was a world leader in number theory.

  • Joaquim-Francisco Coelho, 81

    At a Meeting of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences on Oct. 6, 2020, the Minute honoring the life and service of the late Joaquim-Francisco Coelho, Nancy Clark Smith Professor of the Language and Literature of Portugal and Professor of Comparative Literature, Emeritus, was placed upon the records. Coelho was a scholar of Portuguese and Brazilian literatures and a humanist in the grand tradition.

  • Harvard’s Isaiah Andrews awarded a MacArthur

    Harvard Professor Isaiah Andrews is honored with a MacArthur for his work in econometrics.

    Isaiah Andrews.
  • When it comes to online learning, safety first

    The Harvard Ed Portal and Harvard University IT partnered on a free Zoom event meant to address teachers’ and parents’ concerns about how much time in front of a computer is too much, how can people stay engaged while social distancing, and whether we should worry about children’s safety on the internet.

    Child looking at computer.
  • Voting 101: A primer

    More than the presidency must be decided by Nov. 3. To help students get involved, the University offers the Harvard Votes Challenge.

    Massachusetts Information for Voters booklet.
  • Harvard Worldwide Week truly goes global

    Now in its fourth year, Harvard Worldwide Week goes entirely online for the first time, allowing participants to visit affiliates around the world

    Two individuals stand in front of Magellan Mirror.
  • FAS launches task force to examine visual culture and signage

    FAS launches a task force comprised of faculty, students, and staff to examine FAS’s visual culture.

    Dunster House.
  • An uncertain financial road ahead

    The Gazette spoke with Harvard Vice President for Finances Thomas J. Hollister about FY20 and a forecast for FY21. He also outlined the three overriding financial principles the University will maintain during the pandemic.

    John Harvard Statue.
  • Winds of change

    Holmes academic society renamed in honor of physician-scientist William Augustus Hinton.

    William Augustus Hinton.
  • In and out of school: Two siblings’ approach to growth as undergrads

    Two Harvard College siblings share a graduation year and a determination for pursuing their passions.

    Anna and Myungin Lee celebrating their graduation at home in NY in May 2020.
  • Inspired to action, eager to serve

    The global Harvard community participated in the University’s first Global Day of Service.

    Zoom shot.
  • Preparing grad and professional Schools for remote fall

    We look at how the different graduate Schools are handling online learning in the fall.

    Harvard University campus.
  • Richard A. Smith dies at 95

    Richard A. Smith, a former member of both of Harvard’s governing boards, has died at age 95. Smith was a member of the Harvard Corporation from 1991 to 2000, and…

    Richard A. Smith '46.
  • Catherine Dulac wins Breakthrough Prize for Life Sciences

    Catherine Dulac is awarded a 2021 Breakthrough Prize in Life Sciences for her pioneering work identifying the neural circuitry that regulates parenting behavior.

    Catherine Dulac.
  • Serving up job training

    Breaktime Cafe, started by two Harvard students, works to feed vulnerable community members.

    Breaktime team in the kitchen.
  • ‘I wanted to warn future social movements that listening only to one’s own side can generate dangerous amounts of unrealism’

    Jane Mansbridge, one of the world’s leading scholars of democratic theory talks about her “jagged trajectory” toward success.

    Jane Mansbridge.
  • Pandemic helps set new dean’s priorities

    William V. Giannobile, D.M.Sc. ’96, P.D. ’96, talks about assuming his role as dean of Harvard Dental School of Medicine in the midst of a pandemic and what he envisions for the future.

    William V. Giannobile, D.M.Sc. ’96, P.D. ’96.
  • How to make a better Harvard Police Department

    Review committee details process, and how their findings may inform search for new Harvard University Police Department chief.

    Harvard University Police Department sign.
  • How textbooks taught white supremacy

    We interview historian Donald Yacovone, an associate at The Hutchins Center for African & African American Research, who is writing the book “Teaching White Supremacy: The Textbook Battle Over Race in American History.”

  • What Harvard learned at Summer School

    When the pandemic pushed it totally online, Harvard Summer School strengthen its already strong virtual presence. This is what they learned.

    Entrance to Extension School on Brattle St.
  • University to begin transition to unobserved COVID-19 testing

    After approval from the FDA, Harvard University will begin to transition to unobserved, self-administered COVID-19 screening tests for all individuals authorized to live or be on campus as part of continued efforts to monitor and control the virus.

    Drop off bins for COVID-19 self-administered tests.
  • Harvard partners with national labs on quantum computing

    The White House Office of Science and Technology Policy and the U.S. Department of Energy announced the creation of five new Quantum Information Science Research Centers across the country. Harvard researchers will play important roles in three of the centers.

    A close-up view of a quantum compute
  • ‘Find your way to heal this world’

    In the University’s first-ever virtual first-year Convocation, President Lawrence S. Bacow on Tuesday urged the Class of 2024 to “find your way to heal this world.”

    Opening Zoom screen for convocation.
  • An empty square, a full summer, teaching tuba

    In “Postcards From Home,” three students share thoughtful insights on how the pandemic is changing their lives and those around them.

    Moshe Poliak.
  • First-years make their move

    For first-years, move-in day offers excitement, with a touch of anxiety.

    Lara Dada, ‘24, and her family walking.
  • National Science Foundation awards $20M to launch artificial-intelligence institute

    Harvard partners with MIT, Northeastern, and Tufts to launch NSF artificial intelligence institute.

    Chalkboard with equations.
  • GSAS students come to campus

    Harvard Graduate School of Arts and Sciences welcomed students to campus, with 50 populating its four residence halls.

    GSAS Student Arthur Young moving in.