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Ukrainian president urges help from students and institutional leaders.
The annual report on leaders’ compensation
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This image of Sagittarius A*, captured by the Event Horizon Telescope, is the first direct visual evidence of the presence of this supermassive black hole at the center of our galaxy.
IMAGE CREDIT: EHT Collaboration
Scientists affiliated with the Event Horizon Telescope publish the first image of Sagittarius A*, the black hole at the center of the Milky Way Galaxy.
Steven Goldstein, emeritus professor of government at Smith College, with moderator Christopher Li, director of research at the Indo-Pacific Security Project and fellow at the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs
Screenshot by Harvard Magazine
The East Asian implications of the Russia-Ukraine War
This plaque, placed on Wadsworth House in 2016, began Harvard’s public recognition of its legacy of slavery. The report issued today significantly deepens and broadens that understanding.
Photograph by Niko Yaitanes/Harvard Magazine
A searching examination of the places kept “outside history,” and steps to come to terms with the University’s past
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After much debate, the Faculty of Arts and Sciences votes to adopt a system of previous-term registration for classes.
Amid controversy, the representative student body is replaced.
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After more than a decade, an institutional voice departs.
Erin Kelly and Salamishah Tillet honored for “searing” and “stylish” writing in biography and criticism
After much debate, the Faculty of Arts and Sciences votes to adopt a system of previous-term registration for classes.
more Harvard Squared
The strange, haunting magic of Boston Harbor's Deer Island
Ruby Red horsechestnut (Aesculus x carnea ‘Briotii’)
Photograph by William “Ned” Friedman/The Harvard Arnold Arboretum
Lesser-known plants with tricks up their sleeves (or, rather, stems)
more Opinion
President Bacow on maintaining University values while adopting the best lessons learned during the pandemic
The gains and losses from changes in Commencement and “shopping week”
more Arts
Erin Kelly and Salamishah Tillet honored for “searing” and “stylish” writing in biography and criticism
The 2022 Harvard Horzions scholars
Photograph courtesy of Harvard Graduate School of Arts and Sciences
Ph.D. students discuss subjects from aliens to infrastructural aesthetics.
Actor and producer Alex Molina on filming a feature-length thriller in a single take
more Sports
As an assistant coach at the University of Michigan, Moore helped lead the Wolverines to the NCAA Tournament's Elite Eight.
Photograph by Michigan Athletics/courtesy of Harvard Athletic Communications
She succeeds Kathy Delaney-Smith, who led the Crimson for 40 seasons.
Comprehensive modernization to begin this year
In her final season, the Harvard women’s basketball coach stays “in the moment."
more Harvardiana
Brief life of a dauntless educator: 1887-1951
Emerson’s oratory backstory, somber reunion notes, and happier days
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From the archives
Conductor Sara Jobin highlights the intimate stories within grand productions.
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Readers comment on training teachers, global health, climate change, and more
President Faust on Harvard athletes’ international outreach
Tuition income—and what the College can and ought to charge
Celebrating distinguished authors and artists
<p class="caption"> A poster invites citizens to protect protesters from attacks at Maidan Nezalezhnosti, or Independence Square, in Kiev during the 2013-2014 Euromaidan protests.</p>
<p class="credit">Image courtesy of the Ukrainian Research Institute Reference Library</p>
One of the largest Ukrainian-language collections in the world, housed at Harvard
<p class="caption">A serpentine proximal tubule (light pink) snakes through the center of a multi-layer network of blood vessels (hot pink), all created using a 3-D printer.</p>
<p class="credit">Image from Scientific Reports</p>
3-D-printing pioneer Jennifer Lewis aims to fabricate replacement organs.
SKALA SIKAMINEAS, LESBOS, GREECE
Refugees from Syria rest on the coast of the Greek island of Lesbos. Thousands of refugees cross the Aegean Sea from Turkey in rubber boats every day, fleeing conflicts in Syria, Iraq, and Afghanistan.
A Syrian refugee who came to Lesbos that week by one of many boats told me his new life had just started. “New life as a human being,” he added.
I hope he will not question this emotional sentence on the long way to a new home even though there are signs from the first seconds of their arrival that the refugees didn’t land in a paradise.
Every boat that comes to the island is greeted by two groups. There are dedicated volunteers who work in shifts during day and night to help refugees in their first hours in Europe—and then there are also groups of “engine hunters,” as they are called here. Very often they come first. They only care for the boat. The engines are removed before the last person is taken care of. Business is business.
It was a long week full of almost surreal scenes…
Photograph by Maciek Nabrdalik
A Nieman Fellow documents the perilous passage of refugees fleeing war to seek safety in Europe.
Williamina Fleming
Portrait courtesy of Special Collections, Fine Arts Library/Harvard University
Brief life of a spectrographic pioneer: 1857-1911
<p class="caption">Deidre Lynch in her book-lined Barker Center office</p>
<p class="credit">Photograph by Stu Rosner</p>
Deidre Lynch on the cult of Jane Austen and the complexities of loving literature
Readers comment on training teachers, global health, climate change, and more
President Faust on Harvard athletes’ international outreach
Tuition income—and what the College can and ought to charge
Celebrating distinguished authors and artists
<p class="credit">Illustration by Ken Orvidas</p>
Harvard’s Crowd Innovation Lab studies what motivates crowds to solve problems.
Asim Khwaja’s experiments in taxation aim to buttress the legitimacy of government in developing nations.
Photograph by Jim Harrison
Paying Pakistani tax collectors for better performance to increase tax revenue
The screening of Kent Garrett’s Black GI
Photograph by Jim Harrison
Hidden gem: the Harvard Film Archive
<p class="credit">Photograph by Stu Rosner</p>
Night Song soothes the soul at First Church in Cambridge.
<p class="credit">Photograph by Susan Young Photography</p>
Harvard's three-legged encouragement of entrepreneurship
The annual financial report celebrates current strengths, but cautions about a coming revenue squeeze.
<p class="credit">Photograph by Stu Rosner</p>
Harvard’s chief sustainability officer on scaling up green solutions while scaling back its environmental footprint
<p class="caption">Picketing and strike signs appeared on campus for the first time this millennium as dining-hall workers sought a new contract.</p>
<p class="credit">Courtesy of UNITE HERE Local 26</p>
A strike, negotiations, and a vote on wages, benefits, and union recognition
A 30 percent reduction in greenhouse-gas emissions is achieved; a 2050 goal appears more challenging.
<p class="credit">Photograph by Kris Snibbe/Harvard Public Affairs and Communications</p>
Nobel honorands, a new University Professor, the Honor Code, and more
<p class="caption">From left: Michael Balboni, Tyler J. VanderWeele, and Tracy A. Balboni</p>
<p class="credit">Photograph by Stu Rosner</p>
A Harvard initiative studies how spirituality affects patients’ experience at the end of life
Harvard’s congressional contingent gains five new members.
<p class="caption">Frustrated in regulation by Princeton defenders such as Luke Catarius, Harvard’s quarterback Joe Viviano prevailed in overtime, diving for a one-yard touchdown that gave the Crimson a 23-20 victory.</p>
<p class="credit">Matthew Deshaw/The Harvard Crimson</p>
After living on the edge, the football team confronts a shocking season-ending upset.
<p class="caption">The title character of <i>Madame White Snake</i> and her companion, in the opera's prologue</p>
<p class="credit">Photograph by James Daniel/Courtesy of Beth Morrison Projects</p>
In the “final phase” of her life, Cerise Lim Jacobs builds herself an oeuvre.
Clint Smith
Photograph courtesy of Clint Smith
“It doesn’t even make sense to me that art and protest would be separate.”
<p class="caption">The Classical Theatre of Harlem premiered <i>Fit for a Queen,</i> Shamieh's most recent play, in October.
</p>
<p class="credit">Photograph by Leland Durond Thompson</p>
A playwright making those overlooked by history into lore
<p class="caption">A contemporary rendering of the Springfield arsenal attack during Shays’s Rebellion—a shaping event for the Founders</p>
<p class="credit">Image from Bridgeman Images</p>
The anti-democratic origins of the Constitution
Correspondence on not-so-famous lost words
<p class="caption"> A poster invites citizens to protect protesters from attacks at Maidan Nezalezhnosti, or Independence Square, in Kiev during the 2013-2014 Euromaidan protests.</p>
<p class="credit">Image courtesy of the Ukrainian Research Institute Reference Library</p>
One of the largest Ukrainian-language collections in the world, housed at Harvard