Campus & Community

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  • Gina Raimondo elected chief marshal

    Rhode Island Gov. Gina M. Raimondo ’93 has been elected to serve as chief marshal of the alumni at Harvard’s 367th Commencement Exercises.

    Rhode Island Gov. Gina M. Raimondo
  • Investing in creativity

    At Harvard, the President’s Administrative Innovation Fund embraces creative problem-solving among staff members.

    President's Administrative Innovation Fund open house.
  • Sunstein wins Holberg Prize

    Harvard legal scholar Cass Sunstein has won the Holberg Prize, one of the largest international awards given to an outstanding researcher in the arts and humanities, the social sciences, law, or theology.

  • A history of games at Houghton

    Explore the Harvard library’s treasure trove of games dating back to the 17th century.

  • Faust tells Philadelphia high school girls: ‘You can do anything’

    Faust joined students at Philadelphia High School for Girls last week to discuss the importance of higher education and to urge the young women to pursue their dreams.

  • In Yard digs, there’s an app for that

    Come next fall, a new app will allow viewers to probe archaeological finds from Harvard’s earliest days.

    Harvard student Alexis Hartford tests the app
  • It’s Housing Day, with snowballs

    As nor’easter slackens, Harvard freshmen throng the Yard after learning where they’ll live next, all part of the annual Housing Day.

  • Dench named dean of Graduate School of Arts and Sciences

    Emma Dench, McLean Professor of Ancient and Modern History and of the Classics, will become the dean of Harvard’s Graduate School of Arts and Sciences beginning July 1. Dench will replace Xiao-Li Meng, the Whipple V. N. Jones Professor of Statistics, who was in the post for five years and is stepping down to join the Harvard Science Data Initiative.

  • Hillary Clinton to receive Radcliffe Medal

    The Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study has announced that former U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton will receive the prestigious Radcliffe Medal on May 25 during Harvard’s Commencement week.

    Hillary Rodham Clinton
  • A call to halt endowment tax

    Harvard President Drew Faust was among 49 college and university presidents who called on Congress to repeal the endowment tax enacted in December.

  • Albert M. Henrichs, 74

    Professor Henrichs was an accomplished papyrologist and produced seminal studies across the breadth of Greek literature and religion.

  • James Ackerman, 97

    Professor Ackerman was the most widely read architectural historian in America for decades.

  • Farish A. Jenkins Jr., 72

    Professor Jenkins completed groundbreaking work on gait, discovered a missing link in the evolution from fish to tetrapod, and chronicled an evolutionary step that helped to explain the origin of mammals.

  • Reach Every Reader targets early literacy crisis

    With a $30 million grant from Priscilla Chan and Mark Zuckerberg, the Harvard Graduate School of Education and MIT’s Integrated Learning Initiative will launch Reach Every Reader, which combines cutting-edge education and neuroscience research to help end the childhood literacy crisis.

  • Harvard evolves and grows, but maintains core mission

    Your Harvard series takes President Drew Faust to San Francisco.

    Your Harvard event
  • Inclusion is the key

    Harvard College’s Office for Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion, which includes the Office of BGLTQ Student Life, finds new home in renovated space inside Grays Hall.

  • Charles Slichter, longtime Corporation member, dies at 94

    Charles Pence Slichter ’45-’46, A.M. ’47, Ph.D. ’49, an internationally known physicist who won the National Medal of Science in 2007 and served on the Harvard Corporation for a quarter-century, died on Feb. 19. He was 94.

    Charles Pence Slichter
  • Lewis named Harvard Commencement speaker

    U.S. Rep. John Lewis, a Civil Rights leader who has represented Georgia’s 5th District for more than 30 years, will be the principal speaker at the Afternoon Program of Harvard’s 367th Commencement on May 24.

    Rep. John Lewis, D-Ga.
  • Classroom theory, community action

    Urban Health and Community Change,” a social studies course that debuted last semester, took students out of the classroom and into the Somerville community to roll up their sleeves and take practical action to help the less advantaged.

  • Homeschooled en route to Harvard

    Profiles of three students who were homeschooled before coming to Harvard.

    Claire Dickson '19
  • Harvard rolls out program to protect pedestrians and cyclists

    To protect pedestrians and cyclists, Harvard will soon require side guards be installed on large trucks that are on campus.

    Side guards on Harvard truck
  • Towns, Juzang guide men’s basketball past Brown, 65-58

    Harvard men’s basketball tallied a 65-58 victory over the Brown on Friday at Lavietes Pavilion. With Friday’s win, the Crimson remain in a tie for first place in the Ivy League standings.

  • Solange Knowles is Harvard Foundation Artist of Year

    Grammy Award-winning recording artist, songwriter, and visual artist Solange Knowles has been named the Harvard Foundation’s Artist of the Year.

  • ‘Am I black or am I white?’

    Anthony Peterson dismantled society’s false narrative about race while sharing his own story during an FAS Diversity Dialogue discussion.

    Anthony Peterson
  • Biggest gift to Divinity School

    With a $25 million gift from Susan Shallcross Swartz and her husband James R. Swartz ’64, Harvard Divinity School’s Andover Hall will undergo a renewal, its first since construction more than 100 years ago.

  • Record 42,742 apply to College Class of ’22

    A record 42,742 students applied for admission to Harvard’s Class of 2022, breaking last year’s record of 39,506 for the current freshman class.

  • Trusted voice among leaders in higher education

    Harvard’s next president, Lawrence Bacow, is known among his peers in higher ed as someone they can turn to for advice.

    Lawrence S. Bacow
  • Praise, optimism in reaction to Bacow choice

    Members of the Harvard community weighed in with their thoughts Monday on the selection of former Tufts University president Lawrence S. Bacow as Harvard’s next leader.

    Lawrence S. Bacow.
  • John Harvard’s Charlestown

    After a recent snowfall, we explored the neighborhood of the University’s namesake and spoke with historian Rosemary Kverek of Charlestown and Cambridge Historical Commission Director Charles Sullivan.

    Engraved stone, John Harvard Mall, Charlestown.
  • Bacow, named Harvard president, meets the press

    Larry Bacow, named Harvard president, meets the press.