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A screen shot from the closing moments of the 2020 virtual degree-granting ceremony (a technologically enabled singing of “Fair Harvard”)—an exercise now being replicated in some form for a second consecutive pandemic spring
Harvard Magazine
The 370th degree-conferral will be online for the second consecutive year—with Ruth Simmons as guest speaker.
Kate Murtagh, chief compliance officer and managing director of sustainable investing at Harvard Management Company
Photograph by Stephanie Mitchell, Harvard University.
Harvard Management Company issues its first report on the “net-zero” greenhouse-gas emissions goal.
As expected, the anti-affirmative-action advocate appeals after losing in lower court rounds.
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A Harvard grandmother’s—and grandson’s—research
Harvard development partner Tishman Speyer’s proposed massing and configuration of buildings for the first phase of construction on the Enterprise Research Campus in Allston.
From Tishman Speyer's Project Notification Form filing.
Tishman Speyer details the first phase of the “enterprise research campus”—and points to a doubling of the project’s ultimate size.
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A Harvard grandmother’s—and grandson’s—research
The Undergraduate balances childhood and maturity.
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A Harvard grandmother’s—and grandson’s—research
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(1of 4) Details from The Sistine Chapel: Michelangelo’s ceilingPhotograph © Vatican Museum
Nicholas Callaway publishes the Sistine Chapel in closeup.
Fiction about “the power that comes to us when we uncloset ourselves”
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Turning your al fresco space into a springtime oasis
A short list of fine
documentaries and feature films
“Shen Wei: Painting in Motion,” at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum
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A short list of fine
documentaries and feature films
At Houghton and Lamont libraries, a creative new entry into the Yard
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David Melly rounds Harvard Stadium. Running the loop counterclockwise, he acknowledges, is controversial.
Photograph by Molly Malone
A legendary route’s disputed distance
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From the archives
Illustration by Dan Page
Observations from Twitter prove that even the smallest news outlets can shape public opinion.
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Readers comment on linguistics and sign language, academic class gaps, “Fair Harvard,” final clubs, and more.
President Drew Faust on scientific research and federal funding
The administration’s potentially costly misunderstanding about science
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A 1948 record from Frederick C. Packard’s Harvard Vocarium label, T. S. Eliot: Reading His Own Poetry, on a turntable in a console designed by Alvar Aalto and engineer Jack L. Weisman.Objects courtesy of the Woodberry Poetry Room. Photographs by Stu Rosner
In the Woodberry Poetry Room, a landmark audio collection waits to be heard.
Blanche Ames
Photograph courtesy of the Schlesinger Library, Radcliffe Institute, Harvard University
Brief life of an intrepid botanical illustrator: 1878-1969
Andrew LeClerc in his home garden
Photograph by Stu Rosner
Harvard geneticists seek the biological basis for schizophrenia.
Readers comment on linguistics and sign language, academic class gaps, “Fair Harvard,” final clubs, and more.
President Drew Faust on scientific research and federal funding
The administration’s potentially costly misunderstanding about science
Illustration by Jungyeon Roh
Studying how a movement went from activist activity to aspirational lifestyle
Illustration by John Holcroft
Domestic outsourcing, not globalization, has redefined employer-employee ties.
Lone paddlers take in the sunset
Photograph courtesy of UMass Lowell Kayak Center
Paddling the Merrimack in Lowell and Lawrence
A summer exhibit at the deCordova Sculpture Park and Museum (above) highlights abstract art…
Photograph courtesy of the deCordova Sculpture Park and Museum
Lincoln offers rich history, nature trails, local food, and art.
Haiyang Zhao, LL.M. ’17, adjusts a rain poncho from the Law School.
Photograph by Jim Harrison
Harvard’s wet 366th Commencement proved the occasion for thoughtful conversations about social media, inclusion, and the political landscape.
The 2017 honorands
Mark Zuckerberg
Photograph by Jim Harrison
Words of wisdom from Joe Biden, Drew Faust, Mark Zuckerberg, student speakers, and more
Photograph by Jim Harrison
Regalia update, alumni who serve alma mater, family ties, notable guests, and more features from the festival rites
The status of a contested election
Click to see full graphic: An evolving, and increasingly tenured, professoriate emerges from these data published by the office of the senior vice provost for faculty development and diversity. “URM” means underrepresented minority. More data and details appear at faculty.harvard.edu.
Documenting a decade of gradual evolution in the professoriate
Scott A. Abell and Tracy P. Palandjian
Photographs courtesy of Scott A. Abell and Tracy P. Palandjian
New Board of Overseers leaders, top teachers, Pulitzer Prize winners, and more
The vexatious business of defining a gen-ed course in quantitative literacy
The College’s final-club sanctions: an update
Photograph by Stephanie Mitchell/Harvard Public Affairs and Communications
New Law School dean, new House leaders, Harvard’s top salaries, and more
From HarvardX to the classroom, Harvard Medical teaching online, and more
Jaunts to Nashville and Italy aside, Master of None stays, and is filmed, in New York City. On set in the subway, castmates Lena Waithe (left) and James Ciccone confer with co-creators Aziz Ansari and Yang.
Photograph by KC Bailey/Universal Television/NBCU Photo Bank via Getty Images
Alan Yang serves up warm, epicurean comedy.
Tahmima Anam
Photograph courtesy of Tahmima Anam
Tahmima Anam’s Bengal trilogy finds a resting place.
Where the coastal “professional-managerial elite” are not: view of a closed coal facility from Green Mount Cemetery, Waynesburg, Pennsylvania
Photograph by Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images
A review of Joan Williams’s powerful book on the resentments reshaping American politics
Children’s grotto cave at the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center, Austin, Texas
Images from The Magic of Children’s Gardens: Inspiring Through Creative Design, by Lolly Tai. Used by permission of Temple University Press. © 2017 by Temple University. All Rights Reserved.
Beach reading, the West, segregation, gardening with children, and more
Correspondence on not-so-famous lost words
Debbie Bial
Photograph by Robert Adam Mayer
Harvard alumna Debbie Bial's Posse Foundation and a “new national leadership pipeline”
Graduate School of Arts and Sciences honorees (from left) Russell A. Mittermeier, Sarah P. Morris, Thomas F. Pettigrew, and Richard Sennett
Photograph by Tony Rinaldo/Courtesy of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences
Honorands whose contributions to society emerged from graduate study
Honorees include an architect, athletics enthusiast, and longtime University administrator.