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Please note that Harvard Magazine specializes in Class Notes and Obituaries for graduates of the College and GSAS.For information about class notes for other schools (I.E. Harvard Business School, Harvard Law School, Harvard Medical School, etc), click here. For privacy reasons, Harvard Magazine class notes and obituaries are restricted toHarvard alumni.
HARVARD’S VIRTUAL COMMENCEMENT Harvard’s 369th Commencement goes virtual. THE TANGLED RACIAL HISTORY OF TEXAS Loeb University Professor Annette Gordon-Reed is best known for her Pulitzer Prize-winning history, The Hemingses of Monticello: An American Family.Her slender new book, On Juneteenth (Liveright / W.W. Norton, $15.95), is part history, part memoir and meditation on her own growing up in Texas, the original home to Juneteenth—the commemoration of the June 19, 1865, proclamation that slaveryALAN JENKINS
John harvard's Journal HARVARD PORTRAIT Harvard Law School professor of practice Alan Jenkins ’85, J.D. ’89, first mentions his hometown (Great Neck, Long Island), but quickly moves on toMADISON U. SOWELL
Click on arrow at right to view additional images (1 of 4) Edwin Binney with Helen Willard, curator of the Harvard Theatre Collection, at the exhibition opening for “The Romantic Ballet” in 1966.ADELLA HUNT LOGAN
Brief life of a rebellious black suffragist: 1863-1915. Click on arrow at right to view additional images (1 of 4) The large-screen HELIX system, here deployed in Henry Leitner's Computer Science 1 class, makes it possible for an instructor to teach students who are physically present and see students attending class online, without being confined to a small computer screen at a fixed lectern GREATER BOSTON’S ART-HOUSE CINEMAS: A STATUS REPORT During the lulls between pandemic surges last year, movie-lovers enthusiastically ventured to the West Newton Cinema for screened classics. Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey is always popular, says cinema co-owner David Bramante. People are also devoted to the universal themes in Casablanca, The Wizard of Oz, The Maltese Falcon, Singin’ in the Rain, and among Bramante’s personal ALUMNI OUR JOHN HARVARD” aluMni ’01, Mexico City. CEO, Cinépolis. Kent Walker ’83, Palo Alto.Senior vice president and general counsel, Google Inc. Damian Woetzel, M.P.A. ’07, Roxbury SEPTEMBER-OCTOBER 2003 Noah Evers ’22 and his grandmother Patricia Greenfield ’62, Ph.D. ’66. Photo by Lauren Greenfield ’87 STARLINK | HARVARD MAGAZINE Seniors hunker down in communal quarantine. A renovated Claverly Hall shines at the center of this aerial view of Adams House, as work continues in other parts of the complex.PLEASE LOG IN
Please note that Harvard Magazine specializes in Class Notes and Obituaries for graduates of the College and GSAS.For information about class notes for other schools (I.E. Harvard Business School, Harvard Law School, Harvard Medical School, etc), click here. For privacy reasons, Harvard Magazine class notes and obituaries are restricted toHarvard alumni.
HARVARD’S VIRTUAL COMMENCEMENT Harvard’s 369th Commencement goes virtual. THE TANGLED RACIAL HISTORY OF TEXAS Loeb University Professor Annette Gordon-Reed is best known for her Pulitzer Prize-winning history, The Hemingses of Monticello: An American Family.Her slender new book, On Juneteenth (Liveright / W.W. Norton, $15.95), is part history, part memoir and meditation on her own growing up in Texas, the original home to Juneteenth—the commemoration of the June 19, 1865, proclamation that slaveryALAN JENKINS
John harvard's Journal HARVARD PORTRAIT Harvard Law School professor of practice Alan Jenkins ’85, J.D. ’89, first mentions his hometown (Great Neck, Long Island), but quickly moves on toMADISON U. SOWELL
Click on arrow at right to view additional images (1 of 4) Edwin Binney with Helen Willard, curator of the Harvard Theatre Collection, at the exhibition opening for “The Romantic Ballet” in 1966.ADELLA HUNT LOGAN
Brief life of a rebellious black suffragist: 1863-1915. Click on arrow at right to view additional images (1 of 4) The large-screen HELIX system, here deployed in Henry Leitner's Computer Science 1 class, makes it possible for an instructor to teach students who are physically present and see students attending class online, without being confined to a small computer screen at a fixed lectern GREATER BOSTON’S ART-HOUSE CINEMAS: A STATUS REPORT During the lulls between pandemic surges last year, movie-lovers enthusiastically ventured to the West Newton Cinema for screened classics. Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey is always popular, says cinema co-owner David Bramante. People are also devoted to the universal themes in Casablanca, The Wizard of Oz, The Maltese Falcon, Singin’ in the Rain, and among Bramante’s personal ALUMNI OUR JOHN HARVARD” aluMni ’01, Mexico City. CEO, Cinépolis. Kent Walker ’83, Palo Alto.Senior vice president and general counsel, Google Inc. Damian Woetzel, M.P.A. ’07, Roxbury SEPTEMBER-OCTOBER 2003 Noah Evers ’22 and his grandmother Patricia Greenfield ’62, Ph.D. ’66. Photo by Lauren Greenfield ’87 STARLINK | HARVARD MAGAZINE Seniors hunker down in communal quarantine. A renovated Claverly Hall shines at the center of this aerial view of Adams House, as work continues in other parts of the complex.PLEASE LOG IN
Please note that Harvard Magazine specializes in Class Notes and Obituaries for graduates of the College and GSAS.For information about class notes for other schools (I.E. Harvard Business School, Harvard Law School, Harvard Medical School, etc), click here. For privacy reasons, Harvard Magazine class notes and obituaries are restricted toHarvard alumni.
AMERICAN GOLD RUSH, PEABODY ESSEX MUSEUM “Gold Rush: Daguerreotypes of Early California,” at the PeabodyEssex Museum
LETTING GO OF THE “IDEAL” CLASSROOM “The ‘ideal’ classroom never existed anyway, at least not in a perfectly equitable manner,” writes Julie Chung ’20. A MIND OF ONE’S OWN Harvard Squared STAFF PICK: Atwood’s Tavern Every Monday night, an infectious, foot-stomping—and free—bluegrass show goes live at Atwood’s Tavern in East Cam - bridge, one of the only bars in Greater Boston devoted to Amer -EXPLORE MORE
place to stay at home with a loving and supportive family. Yet, the idea was nerve-wracking. For many Harvard stu-dents, the pathways to postgraduate careers areMADISON U. SOWELL
Click on arrow at right to view additional images (1 of 4) Edwin Binney with Helen Willard, curator of the Harvard Theatre Collection, at the exhibition opening for “The Romantic Ballet” in 1966. A NOVEL TAKE ON ETERNAL LIFE Montage A Novel Take on Eternal Life Dara Horn breathes life into classical Jewish sources. by marina bolotnikova D ara Horn ’99, Ph.D. ’06, would never choose to be immortal.LONESOME NO LONGER
MONTAGE neer Bill Monroe called “the high, lonesome The Couple Who Lit Up “Lawn on D” Eric Höweler and Meejin Yoon design swings forall.
THE "BENTON GOSPELS" A RARE BYZANTINE CODE AT DUMBARTON The acclaimed poet and director of the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and Culture will speak at the annual meeting on June 4—and other graduation-week speakers are announced. WWW.HARVARD-MAGAZINE.COM 301 Moved Permanently. nginx HARVARD-MAGAZINE.COM harvard-magazine.com HARVARD’S VIRTUAL COMMENCEMENT Harvard’s 369th Commencement goes virtual.PLEASE LOG IN
Please note that Harvard Magazine specializes in Class Notes and Obituaries for graduates of the College and GSAS.For information about class notes for other schools (I.E. Harvard Business School, Harvard Law School, Harvard Medical School, etc), click here. For privacy reasons, Harvard Magazine class notes and obituaries are restricted toHarvard alumni.
THE TANGLED RACIAL HISTORY OF TEXAS Loeb University Professor Annette Gordon-Reed is best known for her Pulitzer Prize-winning history, The Hemingses of Monticello: An American Family.Her slender new book, On Juneteenth (Liveright / W.W. Norton, $15.95), is part history, part memoir and meditation on her own growing up in Texas, the original home to Juneteenth—the commemoration of the June 19, 1865, proclamation that slavery THE MUSE & THE MARKETPLACE 2021 A professor and a marketing professional have teamed up to raise awareness of the climate problem through the nonpartisan, nonprofit Potential Energy Coalition.VITA CALLIMACHUS
poets? Knowledge about the techniques and the history of poetry. (Which, by the way, Apollonius does have. But he’s fun to tease.) Theon: Speaking of history, you must have been thinking about thefuture of
HARVARD FAS DEAN’S ANNUAL REPORT The acclaimed poet and director of the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and Culture will speak at the annual meeting on June 4—and other graduation-week speakers are announced.MADISON U. SOWELL
Click on arrow at right to view additional images (1 of 4) Edwin Binney with Helen Willard, curator of the Harvard Theatre Collection, at the exhibition opening for “The Romantic Ballet” in 1966. ALONA BACH | HARVARD MAGAZINE Your editorially independent source for Harvard news, research, arts,and more.
WWW.HARVARD-MAGAZINE.COM 301 Moved Permanently. nginx HARVARD-MAGAZINE.COM harvard-magazine.com HARVARD’S VIRTUAL COMMENCEMENT Harvard’s 369th Commencement goes virtual.PLEASE LOG IN
Please note that Harvard Magazine specializes in Class Notes and Obituaries for graduates of the College and GSAS.For information about class notes for other schools (I.E. Harvard Business School, Harvard Law School, Harvard Medical School, etc), click here. For privacy reasons, Harvard Magazine class notes and obituaries are restricted toHarvard alumni.
THE TANGLED RACIAL HISTORY OF TEXAS Loeb University Professor Annette Gordon-Reed is best known for her Pulitzer Prize-winning history, The Hemingses of Monticello: An American Family.Her slender new book, On Juneteenth (Liveright / W.W. Norton, $15.95), is part history, part memoir and meditation on her own growing up in Texas, the original home to Juneteenth—the commemoration of the June 19, 1865, proclamation that slavery THE MUSE & THE MARKETPLACE 2021 A professor and a marketing professional have teamed up to raise awareness of the climate problem through the nonpartisan, nonprofit Potential Energy Coalition.VITA CALLIMACHUS
poets? Knowledge about the techniques and the history of poetry. (Which, by the way, Apollonius does have. But he’s fun to tease.) Theon: Speaking of history, you must have been thinking about thefuture of
HARVARD FAS DEAN’S ANNUAL REPORT The acclaimed poet and director of the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and Culture will speak at the annual meeting on June 4—and other graduation-week speakers are announced.MADISON U. SOWELL
Click on arrow at right to view additional images (1 of 4) Edwin Binney with Helen Willard, curator of the Harvard Theatre Collection, at the exhibition opening for “The Romantic Ballet” in 1966. ALONA BACH | HARVARD MAGAZINE Your editorially independent source for Harvard news, research, arts,and more.
HARVARD FAS DEAN’S ANNUAL REPORT The acclaimed poet and director of the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and Culture will speak at the annual meeting on June 4—and other graduation-week speakers are announced. A MIND OF ONE’S OWN Harvard Squared STAFF PICK: Atwood’s Tavern Every Monday night, an infectious, foot-stomping—and free—bluegrass show goes live at Atwood’s Tavern in East Cam - bridge, one of the only bars in Greater Boston devoted to Amer - GREATER BOSTON’S ART-HOUSE CINEMAS: A STATUS REPORT During the lulls between pandemic surges last year, movie-lovers enthusiastically ventured to the West Newton Cinema for screened classics. Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey is always popular, says cinema co-owner David Bramante. People are also devoted to the universal themes in Casablanca, The Wizard of Oz, The Maltese Falcon, Singin’ in the Rain, and among Bramante’s personalADELLA HUNT LOGAN
Brief life of a rebellious black suffragist: 1863-1915. Click on arrow at right to view additional images (1 of 4) The large-screen HELIX system, here deployed in Henry Leitner's Computer Science 1 class, makes it possible for an instructor to teach students who are physically present and see students attending class online, without being confined to a small computer screen at a fixed lectern CHAPTER AND VERSE QUOTATION-CITATION CORRESPONDENCE SITE Click on arrow at right to view additional images (1 of 4) The large-screen HELIX system, here deployed in Henry Leitner's Computer Science 1 class, makes it possible for an instructor to teach students who are physically present and see students attending class online, without being confined to a small computer screen at a fixed lectern location; the camera follows the professor and assures JOHN HARVARD'S JOURNAL ADMISSIONS, THROUGH THE AGES John harvard's Journal we used something that had those proper-ties as an airplane-engine insulation.’ You don’t see that at companiesbecause they’re
A NOVEL TAKE ON ETERNAL LIFE Montage A Novel Take on Eternal Life Dara Horn breathes life into classical Jewish sources. by marina bolotnikova D ara Horn ’99, Ph.D. ’06, would never choose to be immortal. THE UNDERGRADUATE FRIENDING THE FACULTY…AND OTHERS Harvard Magazine 57 I n 1985, an astonishing time-motion study compared badminton with ten-nis. That year, Boris Becker defeated Kevin Curran in four sets for theHONORIS CAUSA
Three women and six men received honorary degrees at Harvard’s 356th Commencement. Provost Steven E. Hyman introduced them to the audience, and President Derek Bok read the THE COLLEGE PUMP HOW TO HAVE FLU 76 November - December 2010 the college pump Illustration by Mark Steele W hen David Barry ’63 was in college, he looked for-ward toflu season with
WWW.HARVARD-MAGAZINE.COM 301 Moved Permanently. nginx HARVARD-MAGAZINE.COM harvard-magazine.com HARVARD’S VIRTUAL COMMENCEMENT Harvard’s 369th Commencement goes virtual.PLEASE LOG IN
Please note that Harvard Magazine specializes in Class Notes and Obituaries for graduates of the College and GSAS.For information about class notes for other schools (I.E. Harvard Business School, Harvard Law School, Harvard Medical School, etc), click here. For privacy reasons, Harvard Magazine class notes and obituaries are restricted toHarvard alumni.
THE TANGLED RACIAL HISTORY OF TEXAS Loeb University Professor Annette Gordon-Reed is best known for her Pulitzer Prize-winning history, The Hemingses of Monticello: An American Family.Her slender new book, On Juneteenth (Liveright / W.W. Norton, $15.95), is part history, part memoir and meditation on her own growing up in Texas, the original home to Juneteenth—the commemoration of the June 19, 1865, proclamation that slavery THE MUSE & THE MARKETPLACE 2021 A professor and a marketing professional have teamed up to raise awareness of the climate problem through the nonpartisan, nonprofit Potential Energy Coalition.VITA CALLIMACHUS
poets? Knowledge about the techniques and the history of poetry. (Which, by the way, Apollonius does have. But he’s fun to tease.) Theon: Speaking of history, you must have been thinking about thefuture of
HARVARD FAS DEAN’S ANNUAL REPORT The acclaimed poet and director of the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and Culture will speak at the annual meeting on June 4—and other graduation-week speakers are announced.MADISON U. SOWELL
Click on arrow at right to view additional images (1 of 4) Edwin Binney with Helen Willard, curator of the Harvard Theatre Collection, at the exhibition opening for “The Romantic Ballet” in 1966. ALONA BACH | HARVARD MAGAZINE Your editorially independent source for Harvard news, research, arts,and more.
WWW.HARVARD-MAGAZINE.COM 301 Moved Permanently. nginx HARVARD-MAGAZINE.COM harvard-magazine.com HARVARD’S VIRTUAL COMMENCEMENT Harvard’s 369th Commencement goes virtual.PLEASE LOG IN
Please note that Harvard Magazine specializes in Class Notes and Obituaries for graduates of the College and GSAS.For information about class notes for other schools (I.E. Harvard Business School, Harvard Law School, Harvard Medical School, etc), click here. For privacy reasons, Harvard Magazine class notes and obituaries are restricted toHarvard alumni.
THE TANGLED RACIAL HISTORY OF TEXAS Loeb University Professor Annette Gordon-Reed is best known for her Pulitzer Prize-winning history, The Hemingses of Monticello: An American Family.Her slender new book, On Juneteenth (Liveright / W.W. Norton, $15.95), is part history, part memoir and meditation on her own growing up in Texas, the original home to Juneteenth—the commemoration of the June 19, 1865, proclamation that slavery THE MUSE & THE MARKETPLACE 2021 A professor and a marketing professional have teamed up to raise awareness of the climate problem through the nonpartisan, nonprofit Potential Energy Coalition.VITA CALLIMACHUS
poets? Knowledge about the techniques and the history of poetry. (Which, by the way, Apollonius does have. But he’s fun to tease.) Theon: Speaking of history, you must have been thinking about thefuture of
HARVARD FAS DEAN’S ANNUAL REPORT The acclaimed poet and director of the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and Culture will speak at the annual meeting on June 4—and other graduation-week speakers are announced.MADISON U. SOWELL
Click on arrow at right to view additional images (1 of 4) Edwin Binney with Helen Willard, curator of the Harvard Theatre Collection, at the exhibition opening for “The Romantic Ballet” in 1966. ALONA BACH | HARVARD MAGAZINE Your editorially independent source for Harvard news, research, arts,and more.
HARVARD FAS DEAN’S ANNUAL REPORT The acclaimed poet and director of the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and Culture will speak at the annual meeting on June 4—and other graduation-week speakers are announced. A MIND OF ONE’S OWN Harvard Squared STAFF PICK: Atwood’s Tavern Every Monday night, an infectious, foot-stomping—and free—bluegrass show goes live at Atwood’s Tavern in East Cam - bridge, one of the only bars in Greater Boston devoted to Amer - GREATER BOSTON’S ART-HOUSE CINEMAS: A STATUS REPORT During the lulls between pandemic surges last year, movie-lovers enthusiastically ventured to the West Newton Cinema for screened classics. Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey is always popular, says cinema co-owner David Bramante. People are also devoted to the universal themes in Casablanca, The Wizard of Oz, The Maltese Falcon, Singin’ in the Rain, and among Bramante’s personalADELLA HUNT LOGAN
Brief life of a rebellious black suffragist: 1863-1915. Click on arrow at right to view additional images (1 of 4) The large-screen HELIX system, here deployed in Henry Leitner's Computer Science 1 class, makes it possible for an instructor to teach students who are physically present and see students attending class online, without being confined to a small computer screen at a fixed lectern CHAPTER AND VERSE QUOTATION-CITATION CORRESPONDENCE SITE Click on arrow at right to view additional images (1 of 4) The large-screen HELIX system, here deployed in Henry Leitner's Computer Science 1 class, makes it possible for an instructor to teach students who are physically present and see students attending class online, without being confined to a small computer screen at a fixed lectern location; the camera follows the professor and assures JOHN HARVARD'S JOURNAL ADMISSIONS, THROUGH THE AGES John harvard's Journal we used something that had those proper-ties as an airplane-engine insulation.’ You don’t see that at companiesbecause they’re
A NOVEL TAKE ON ETERNAL LIFE Montage A Novel Take on Eternal Life Dara Horn breathes life into classical Jewish sources. by marina bolotnikova D ara Horn ’99, Ph.D. ’06, would never choose to be immortal. THE UNDERGRADUATE FRIENDING THE FACULTY…AND OTHERS Harvard Magazine 57 I n 1985, an astonishing time-motion study compared badminton with ten-nis. That year, Boris Becker defeated Kevin Curran in four sets for theHONORIS CAUSA
Three women and six men received honorary degrees at Harvard’s 356th Commencement. Provost Steven E. Hyman introduced them to the audience, and President Derek Bok read the THE COLLEGE PUMP HOW TO HAVE FLU 76 November - December 2010 the college pump Illustration by Mark Steele W hen David Barry ’63 was in college, he looked for-ward toflu season with
STARLINK | HARVARD MAGAZINE Seniors hunker down in communal quarantine. A renovated Claverly Hall shines at the center of this aerial view of Adams House, as work continues in other parts of the complex.EMAIL NEWSLETTERS
Harvard Squared. 6X/year. The editors' curated picks for what to eat, experience, and explore in and around CambridgePLEASE LOG IN
Please note that Harvard Magazine specializes in Class Notes and Obituaries for graduates of the College and GSAS.For information about class notes for other schools (I.E. Harvard Business School, Harvard Law School, Harvard Medical School, etc), click here. For privacy reasons, Harvard Magazine class notes and obituaries are restricted toHarvard alumni.
HARVARD’S VIRTUAL COMMENCEMENT Harvard’s 369th Commencement goes virtual. THE TANGLED RACIAL HISTORY OF TEXAS Loeb University Professor Annette Gordon-Reed is best known for her Pulitzer Prize-winning history, The Hemingses of Monticello: An American Family.Her slender new book, On Juneteenth (Liveright / W.W. Norton, $15.95), is part history, part memoir and meditation on her own growing up in Texas, the original home to Juneteenth—the commemoration of the June 19, 1865, proclamation that slaveryMADISON U. SOWELL
Click on arrow at right to view additional images (1 of 4) Edwin Binney with Helen Willard, curator of the Harvard Theatre Collection, at the exhibition opening for “The Romantic Ballet” in 1966. GREATER BOSTON’S ART-HOUSE CINEMAS: A STATUS REPORT During the lulls between pandemic surges last year, movie-lovers enthusiastically ventured to the West Newton Cinema for screened classics. Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey is always popular, says cinema co-owner David Bramante. People are also devoted to the universal themes in Casablanca, The Wizard of Oz, The Maltese Falcon, Singin’ in the Rain, and among Bramante’s personalEXPLORE MORE
place to stay at home with a loving and supportive family. Yet, the idea was nerve-wracking. For many Harvard stu-dents, the pathways to postgraduate careers are ALUMNI OUR JOHN HARVARD” aluMni ’01, Mexico City. CEO, Cinépolis. Kent Walker ’83, Palo Alto.Senior vice president and general counsel, Google Inc. Damian Woetzel, M.P.A. ’07, Roxbury SEPTEMBER-OCTOBER 2003 Noah Evers ’22 and his grandmother Patricia Greenfield ’62, Ph.D. ’66. Photo by Lauren Greenfield ’87 STARLINK | HARVARD MAGAZINE Seniors hunker down in communal quarantine. A renovated Claverly Hall shines at the center of this aerial view of Adams House, as work continues in other parts of the complex.EMAIL NEWSLETTERS
Harvard Squared. 6X/year. The editors' curated picks for what to eat, experience, and explore in and around CambridgePLEASE LOG IN
Please note that Harvard Magazine specializes in Class Notes and Obituaries for graduates of the College and GSAS.For information about class notes for other schools (I.E. Harvard Business School, Harvard Law School, Harvard Medical School, etc), click here. For privacy reasons, Harvard Magazine class notes and obituaries are restricted toHarvard alumni.
HARVARD’S VIRTUAL COMMENCEMENT Harvard’s 369th Commencement goes virtual. THE TANGLED RACIAL HISTORY OF TEXAS Loeb University Professor Annette Gordon-Reed is best known for her Pulitzer Prize-winning history, The Hemingses of Monticello: An American Family.Her slender new book, On Juneteenth (Liveright / W.W. Norton, $15.95), is part history, part memoir and meditation on her own growing up in Texas, the original home to Juneteenth—the commemoration of the June 19, 1865, proclamation that slaveryMADISON U. SOWELL
Click on arrow at right to view additional images (1 of 4) Edwin Binney with Helen Willard, curator of the Harvard Theatre Collection, at the exhibition opening for “The Romantic Ballet” in 1966. GREATER BOSTON’S ART-HOUSE CINEMAS: A STATUS REPORT During the lulls between pandemic surges last year, movie-lovers enthusiastically ventured to the West Newton Cinema for screened classics. Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey is always popular, says cinema co-owner David Bramante. People are also devoted to the universal themes in Casablanca, The Wizard of Oz, The Maltese Falcon, Singin’ in the Rain, and among Bramante’s personalEXPLORE MORE
place to stay at home with a loving and supportive family. Yet, the idea was nerve-wracking. For many Harvard stu-dents, the pathways to postgraduate careers are ALUMNI OUR JOHN HARVARD” aluMni ’01, Mexico City. CEO, Cinépolis. Kent Walker ’83, Palo Alto.Senior vice president and general counsel, Google Inc. Damian Woetzel, M.P.A. ’07, Roxbury SEPTEMBER-OCTOBER 2003 Noah Evers ’22 and his grandmother Patricia Greenfield ’62, Ph.D. ’66. Photo by Lauren Greenfield ’87 HARVARD OVERSEER PROSPECTS’ VIEWS In light of the importance of the annual election for members of Harvard’s Board of Overseers—and heightened interest stemming from last year’s vigorously contested results and the possibility of a similar contest this year—Harvard Magazine is providing enhanced coverage. We asked each candidate presented by the HAA nominating committee and each member of the Harvard HARVARD FAS DEAN’S ANNUAL REPORT The acclaimed poet and director of the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and Culture will speak at the annual meeting on June 4—and other graduation-week speakers are announced. HARVARD’S HOUSEZERO, THE BUILDING THAT THINKS Click on arrow at right to view additional images (1 of 4) The large-screen HELIX system, here deployed in Henry Leitner's Computer Science 1 class, makes it possible for an instructor to teach students who are physically present and see students attending class online, without being confined to a small computer screen at a fixed lectern location; the camera follows the professor and assures RECENT BOOKS WITH HARVARD CONNECTIONS After renovation, 60 Oxford Street will become the hub for quantum science and engineering at Harvard. Photograph by Kristina DeMichele/Harvard Magazine.JONATHAN SHAW
Tishman Speyer details the first phase of the “enterprise research campus”—and points to a doubling of the project’s ultimate size. FROM AIDS ACTIVISM TO ART View video from an exhibition at the Harvard Art Museum that explores the visual legacy of ACT UP’s campaign to galvanize action against anew epidemic.
| HARVARD MAGAZINE
After renovation, 60 Oxford Street will become the hub for quantum science and engineering at Harvard. Photograph by Kristina DeMichele/Harvard Magazine.| HARVARD MAGAZINE
Click on arrow at right to view additional images (1 of 4) The large-screen HELIX system, here deployed in Henry Leitner's Computer Science 1 class, makes it possible for an instructor to teach students who are physically present and see students attending class online, without being confined to a small computer screen at a fixed lectern location; the camera follows the professor and assures ALTERRNATIVE MEDICINE, POETRY BOOK BY PHYSICIAN RAFAEL Rafael Campo, M.D., straddles medicine and metonymy. Reduced expenses offset declines in revenue for FY 2021, helping Harvard avoid the layoffs that have eliminated one in eight jobs within highereducation.
CHAPTER & VERSE
MONTAGE not as continuities, but as collections. Within this approach lies a vestigial New Critical assumption that the proper unit of decipherment is not the sequence, but the STARLINK | HARVARD MAGAZINE Seniors hunker down in communal quarantine. A renovated Claverly Hall shines at the center of this aerial view of Adams House, as work continues in other parts of the complex.EMAIL NEWSLETTERS
Harvard Squared. 6X/year. The editors' curated picks for what to eat, experience, and explore in and around CambridgePLEASE LOG IN
Please note that Harvard Magazine specializes in Class Notes and Obituaries for graduates of the College and GSAS.For information about class notes for other schools (I.E. Harvard Business School, Harvard Law School, Harvard Medical School, etc), click here. For privacy reasons, Harvard Magazine class notes and obituaries are restricted toHarvard alumni.
HARVARD’S VIRTUAL COMMENCEMENT Harvard’s 369th Commencement goes virtual. THE TANGLED RACIAL HISTORY OF TEXAS Loeb University Professor Annette Gordon-Reed is best known for her Pulitzer Prize-winning history, The Hemingses of Monticello: An American Family.Her slender new book, On Juneteenth (Liveright / W.W. Norton, $15.95), is part history, part memoir and meditation on her own growing up in Texas, the original home to Juneteenth—the commemoration of the June 19, 1865, proclamation that slaveryMADISON U. SOWELL
Click on arrow at right to view additional images (1 of 4) Edwin Binney with Helen Willard, curator of the Harvard Theatre Collection, at the exhibition opening for “The Romantic Ballet” in 1966. GREATER BOSTON’S ART-HOUSE CINEMAS: A STATUS REPORT During the lulls between pandemic surges last year, movie-lovers enthusiastically ventured to the West Newton Cinema for screened classics. Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey is always popular, says cinema co-owner David Bramante. People are also devoted to the universal themes in Casablanca, The Wizard of Oz, The Maltese Falcon, Singin’ in the Rain, and among Bramante’s personalEXPLORE MORE
place to stay at home with a loving and supportive family. Yet, the idea was nerve-wracking. For many Harvard stu-dents, the pathways to postgraduate careers are ALUMNI OUR JOHN HARVARD” aluMni ’01, Mexico City. CEO, Cinépolis. Kent Walker ’83, Palo Alto.Senior vice president and general counsel, Google Inc. Damian Woetzel, M.P.A. ’07, Roxbury SEPTEMBER-OCTOBER 2003 Noah Evers ’22 and his grandmother Patricia Greenfield ’62, Ph.D. ’66. Photo by Lauren Greenfield ’87 STARLINK | HARVARD MAGAZINE Seniors hunker down in communal quarantine. A renovated Claverly Hall shines at the center of this aerial view of Adams House, as work continues in other parts of the complex.EMAIL NEWSLETTERS
Harvard Squared. 6X/year. The editors' curated picks for what to eat, experience, and explore in and around CambridgePLEASE LOG IN
Please note that Harvard Magazine specializes in Class Notes and Obituaries for graduates of the College and GSAS.For information about class notes for other schools (I.E. Harvard Business School, Harvard Law School, Harvard Medical School, etc), click here. For privacy reasons, Harvard Magazine class notes and obituaries are restricted toHarvard alumni.
HARVARD’S VIRTUAL COMMENCEMENT Harvard’s 369th Commencement goes virtual. THE TANGLED RACIAL HISTORY OF TEXAS Loeb University Professor Annette Gordon-Reed is best known for her Pulitzer Prize-winning history, The Hemingses of Monticello: An American Family.Her slender new book, On Juneteenth (Liveright / W.W. Norton, $15.95), is part history, part memoir and meditation on her own growing up in Texas, the original home to Juneteenth—the commemoration of the June 19, 1865, proclamation that slaveryMADISON U. SOWELL
Click on arrow at right to view additional images (1 of 4) Edwin Binney with Helen Willard, curator of the Harvard Theatre Collection, at the exhibition opening for “The Romantic Ballet” in 1966. GREATER BOSTON’S ART-HOUSE CINEMAS: A STATUS REPORT During the lulls between pandemic surges last year, movie-lovers enthusiastically ventured to the West Newton Cinema for screened classics. Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey is always popular, says cinema co-owner David Bramante. People are also devoted to the universal themes in Casablanca, The Wizard of Oz, The Maltese Falcon, Singin’ in the Rain, and among Bramante’s personalEXPLORE MORE
place to stay at home with a loving and supportive family. Yet, the idea was nerve-wracking. For many Harvard stu-dents, the pathways to postgraduate careers are ALUMNI OUR JOHN HARVARD” aluMni ’01, Mexico City. CEO, Cinépolis. Kent Walker ’83, Palo Alto.Senior vice president and general counsel, Google Inc. Damian Woetzel, M.P.A. ’07, Roxbury SEPTEMBER-OCTOBER 2003 Noah Evers ’22 and his grandmother Patricia Greenfield ’62, Ph.D. ’66. Photo by Lauren Greenfield ’87 HARVARD OVERSEER PROSPECTS’ VIEWS In light of the importance of the annual election for members of Harvard’s Board of Overseers—and heightened interest stemming from last year’s vigorously contested results and the possibility of a similar contest this year—Harvard Magazine is providing enhanced coverage. We asked each candidate presented by the HAA nominating committee and each member of the Harvard HARVARD FAS DEAN’S ANNUAL REPORT The acclaimed poet and director of the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and Culture will speak at the annual meeting on June 4—and other graduation-week speakers are announced. HARVARD’S HOUSEZERO, THE BUILDING THAT THINKS Click on arrow at right to view additional images (1 of 4) The large-screen HELIX system, here deployed in Henry Leitner's Computer Science 1 class, makes it possible for an instructor to teach students who are physically present and see students attending class online, without being confined to a small computer screen at a fixed lectern location; the camera follows the professor and assures RECENT BOOKS WITH HARVARD CONNECTIONS After renovation, 60 Oxford Street will become the hub for quantum science and engineering at Harvard. Photograph by Kristina DeMichele/Harvard Magazine.JONATHAN SHAW
Tishman Speyer details the first phase of the “enterprise research campus”—and points to a doubling of the project’s ultimate size. FROM AIDS ACTIVISM TO ART View video from an exhibition at the Harvard Art Museum that explores the visual legacy of ACT UP’s campaign to galvanize action against anew epidemic.
| HARVARD MAGAZINE
After renovation, 60 Oxford Street will become the hub for quantum science and engineering at Harvard. Photograph by Kristina DeMichele/Harvard Magazine.| HARVARD MAGAZINE
Click on arrow at right to view additional images (1 of 4) The large-screen HELIX system, here deployed in Henry Leitner's Computer Science 1 class, makes it possible for an instructor to teach students who are physically present and see students attending class online, without being confined to a small computer screen at a fixed lectern location; the camera follows the professor and assures ALTERRNATIVE MEDICINE, POETRY BOOK BY PHYSICIAN RAFAEL Rafael Campo, M.D., straddles medicine and metonymy. Reduced expenses offset declines in revenue for FY 2021, helping Harvard avoid the layoffs that have eliminated one in eight jobs within highereducation.
CHAPTER & VERSE
MONTAGE not as continuities, but as collections. Within this approach lies a vestigial New Critical assumption that the proper unit of decipherment is not the sequence, but the STARLINK | HARVARD MAGAZINE Seniors hunker down in communal quarantine. A renovated Claverly Hall shines at the center of this aerial view of Adams House, as work continues in other parts of the complex.PLEASE LOG IN
Please note that Harvard Magazine specializes in Class Notes and Obituaries for graduates of the College and GSAS.For information about class notes for other schools (I.E. Harvard Business School, Harvard Law School, Harvard Medical School, etc), click here. For privacy reasons, Harvard Magazine class notes and obituaries are restricted toHarvard alumni.
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Harvard Squared. 6X/year. The editors' curated picks for what to eat, experience, and explore in and around Cambridge HARVARD’S VIRTUAL COMMENCEMENT Harvard’s 369th Commencement goes virtual. THE TANGLED RACIAL HISTORY OF TEXAS Loeb University Professor Annette Gordon-Reed is best known for her Pulitzer Prize-winning history, The Hemingses of Monticello: An American Family.Her slender new book, On Juneteenth (Liveright / W.W. Norton, $15.95), is part history, part memoir and meditation on her own growing up in Texas, the original home to Juneteenth—the commemoration of the June 19, 1865, proclamation that slavery ELIZABETH BANGS BRYANT In 1936, Elizabeth Bangs Bryant had worked at Harvard’s Museum of Comparative Zoology for a few decades, and her expertise was just beginning to gain recognition. Noted for her taxonomic skills in identifying, classifying, and cataloging spiders, Bryant was busy maintaining and cataloguing the museum’s ever-expanding collections.MADISON U. SOWELL
Click on arrow at right to view additional images (1 of 4) Edwin Binney with Helen Willard, curator of the Harvard Theatre Collection, at the exhibition opening for “The Romantic Ballet” in 1966. NOVEMBER-DECEMBER 2005 A professor and a marketing professional have teamed up to raise awareness of the climate problem through the nonpartisan, nonprofit Potential Energy Coalition.MARCH-APRIL 2008
A professor and a marketing professional have teamed up to raise awareness of the climate problem through the nonpartisan, nonprofit Potential Energy Coalition. SEPTEMBER-OCTOBER 2003 Noah Evers ’22 and his grandmother Patricia Greenfield ’62, Ph.D. ’66. Photo by Lauren Greenfield ’87 STARLINK | HARVARD MAGAZINE Seniors hunker down in communal quarantine. A renovated Claverly Hall shines at the center of this aerial view of Adams House, as work continues in other parts of the complex.PLEASE LOG IN
Please note that Harvard Magazine specializes in Class Notes and Obituaries for graduates of the College and GSAS.For information about class notes for other schools (I.E. Harvard Business School, Harvard Law School, Harvard Medical School, etc), click here. For privacy reasons, Harvard Magazine class notes and obituaries are restricted toHarvard alumni.
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Harvard Squared. 6X/year. The editors' curated picks for what to eat, experience, and explore in and around Cambridge HARVARD’S VIRTUAL COMMENCEMENT Harvard’s 369th Commencement goes virtual. THE TANGLED RACIAL HISTORY OF TEXAS Loeb University Professor Annette Gordon-Reed is best known for her Pulitzer Prize-winning history, The Hemingses of Monticello: An American Family.Her slender new book, On Juneteenth (Liveright / W.W. Norton, $15.95), is part history, part memoir and meditation on her own growing up in Texas, the original home to Juneteenth—the commemoration of the June 19, 1865, proclamation that slavery ELIZABETH BANGS BRYANT In 1936, Elizabeth Bangs Bryant had worked at Harvard’s Museum of Comparative Zoology for a few decades, and her expertise was just beginning to gain recognition. Noted for her taxonomic skills in identifying, classifying, and cataloging spiders, Bryant was busy maintaining and cataloguing the museum’s ever-expanding collections.MADISON U. SOWELL
Click on arrow at right to view additional images (1 of 4) Edwin Binney with Helen Willard, curator of the Harvard Theatre Collection, at the exhibition opening for “The Romantic Ballet” in 1966. NOVEMBER-DECEMBER 2005 A professor and a marketing professional have teamed up to raise awareness of the climate problem through the nonpartisan, nonprofit Potential Energy Coalition.MARCH-APRIL 2008
A professor and a marketing professional have teamed up to raise awareness of the climate problem through the nonpartisan, nonprofit Potential Energy Coalition. SEPTEMBER-OCTOBER 2003 Noah Evers ’22 and his grandmother Patricia Greenfield ’62, Ph.D. ’66. Photo by Lauren Greenfield ’87 THE MUSE & THE MARKETPLACE 2021 A professor and a marketing professional have teamed up to raise awareness of the climate problem through the nonpartisan, nonprofit Potential Energy Coalition. HARVARD IN ALLSTON: NEW POSSIBILITIES? Time to rethink the campus-development agenda? Reduced expenses offset declines in revenue for FY 2021, helping Harvard avoid the layoffs that have eliminated one in eight jobs within higher education. HARVARD OVERSEER PROSPECTS’ VIEWS In light of the importance of the annual election for members of Harvard’s Board of Overseers—and heightened interest stemming from last year’s vigorously contested results and the possibility of a similar contest this year—Harvard Magazine is providing enhanced coverage. We asked each candidate presented by the HAA nominating committee and each member of the Harvard HARVARD FAS DEAN’S ANNUAL REPORT The acclaimed poet and director of the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and Culture will speak at the annual meeting on June 4—and other graduation-week speakers are announced. HARVARD’S HOUSEZERO, THE BUILDING THAT THINKS Click on arrow at right to view additional images (1 of 4) The large-screen HELIX system, here deployed in Henry Leitner's Computer Science 1 class, makes it possible for an instructor to teach students who are physically present and see students attending class online, without being confined to a small computer screen at a fixed lectern location; the camera follows the professor and assures FROM AIDS ACTIVISM TO ART View video from an exhibition at the Harvard Art Museum that explores the visual legacy of ACT UP’s campaign to galvanize action against anew epidemic.
JONATHAN SHAW
Tishman Speyer details the first phase of the “enterprise research campus”—and points to a doubling of the project’s ultimate size.| HARVARD MAGAZINE
After renovation, 60 Oxford Street will become the hub for quantum science and engineering at Harvard. Photograph by Kristina DeMichele/Harvard Magazine. AGING GRACEFULLY AT HOME As board president of Staying Put in New Canaan, Tom Towers, M.B.A. ’64, believes in self-reliance. The Connecticut organization,modeled
| HARVARD MAGAZINE
Click on arrow at right to view additional images (1 of 4) The large-screen HELIX system, here deployed in Henry Leitner's Computer Science 1 class, makes it possible for an instructor to teach students who are physically present and see students attending class online, without being confined to a small computer screen at a fixed lectern location; the camera follows the professor and assures STARLINK | HARVARD MAGAZINE Seniors hunker down in communal quarantine. A renovated Claverly Hall shines at the center of this aerial view of Adams House, as work continues in other parts of the complex.EMAIL NEWSLETTERS
Harvard Squared. 6X/year. The editors' curated picks for what to eat, experience, and explore in and around Cambridge HARVARD’S VIRTUAL COMMENCEMENT Harvard’s 369th Commencement goes virtual.PLEASE LOG IN
Please note that Harvard Magazine specializes in Class Notes and Obituaries for graduates of the College and GSAS.For information about class notes for other schools (I.E. Harvard Business School, Harvard Law School, Harvard Medical School, etc), click here. For privacy reasons, Harvard Magazine class notes and obituaries are restricted toHarvard alumni.
THE TANGLED RACIAL HISTORY OF TEXAS Loeb University Professor Annette Gordon-Reed is best known for her Pulitzer Prize-winning history, The Hemingses of Monticello: An American Family.Her slender new book, On Juneteenth (Liveright / W.W. Norton, $15.95), is part history, part memoir and meditation on her own growing up in Texas, the original home to Juneteenth—the commemoration of the June 19, 1865, proclamation that slavery ELIZABETH BANGS BRYANT In 1936, Elizabeth Bangs Bryant had worked at Harvard’s Museum of Comparative Zoology for a few decades, and her expertise was just beginning to gain recognition. Noted for her taxonomic skills in identifying, classifying, and cataloging spiders, Bryant was busy maintaining and cataloguing the museum’s ever-expanding collections.EXPLORE MORE
place to stay at home with a loving and supportive family. Yet, the idea was nerve-wracking. For many Harvard stu-dents, the pathways to postgraduate careers are GREATER BOSTON’S ART-HOUSE CINEMAS: A STATUS REPORT During the lulls between pandemic surges last year, movie-lovers enthusiastically ventured to the West Newton Cinema for screened classics. Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey is always popular, says cinema co-owner David Bramante. People are also devoted to the universal themes in Casablanca, The Wizard of Oz, The Maltese Falcon, Singin’ in the Rain, and among Bramante’s personalMADISON U. SOWELL
Click on arrow at right to view additional images (1 of 4) Edwin Binney with Helen Willard, curator of the Harvard Theatre Collection, at the exhibition opening for “The Romantic Ballet” in 1966. ALUMNI OUR JOHN HARVARD” aluMni ’01, Mexico City. CEO, Cinépolis. Kent Walker ’83, Palo Alto.Senior vice president and general counsel, Google Inc. Damian Woetzel, M.P.A. ’07, Roxbury STARLINK | HARVARD MAGAZINE Seniors hunker down in communal quarantine. A renovated Claverly Hall shines at the center of this aerial view of Adams House, as work continues in other parts of the complex.EMAIL NEWSLETTERS
Harvard Squared. 6X/year. The editors' curated picks for what to eat, experience, and explore in and around Cambridge HARVARD’S VIRTUAL COMMENCEMENT Harvard’s 369th Commencement goes virtual.PLEASE LOG IN
Please note that Harvard Magazine specializes in Class Notes and Obituaries for graduates of the College and GSAS.For information about class notes for other schools (I.E. Harvard Business School, Harvard Law School, Harvard Medical School, etc), click here. For privacy reasons, Harvard Magazine class notes and obituaries are restricted toHarvard alumni.
THE TANGLED RACIAL HISTORY OF TEXAS Loeb University Professor Annette Gordon-Reed is best known for her Pulitzer Prize-winning history, The Hemingses of Monticello: An American Family.Her slender new book, On Juneteenth (Liveright / W.W. Norton, $15.95), is part history, part memoir and meditation on her own growing up in Texas, the original home to Juneteenth—the commemoration of the June 19, 1865, proclamation that slavery ELIZABETH BANGS BRYANT In 1936, Elizabeth Bangs Bryant had worked at Harvard’s Museum of Comparative Zoology for a few decades, and her expertise was just beginning to gain recognition. Noted for her taxonomic skills in identifying, classifying, and cataloging spiders, Bryant was busy maintaining and cataloguing the museum’s ever-expanding collections.EXPLORE MORE
place to stay at home with a loving and supportive family. Yet, the idea was nerve-wracking. For many Harvard stu-dents, the pathways to postgraduate careers are GREATER BOSTON’S ART-HOUSE CINEMAS: A STATUS REPORT During the lulls between pandemic surges last year, movie-lovers enthusiastically ventured to the West Newton Cinema for screened classics. Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey is always popular, says cinema co-owner David Bramante. People are also devoted to the universal themes in Casablanca, The Wizard of Oz, The Maltese Falcon, Singin’ in the Rain, and among Bramante’s personalMADISON U. SOWELL
Click on arrow at right to view additional images (1 of 4) Edwin Binney with Helen Willard, curator of the Harvard Theatre Collection, at the exhibition opening for “The Romantic Ballet” in 1966. ALUMNI OUR JOHN HARVARD” aluMni ’01, Mexico City. CEO, Cinépolis. Kent Walker ’83, Palo Alto.Senior vice president and general counsel, Google Inc. Damian Woetzel, M.P.A. ’07, Roxbury HARVARD OVERSEER PROSPECTS’ VIEWS In light of the importance of the annual election for members of Harvard’s Board of Overseers—and heightened interest stemming from last year’s vigorously contested results and the possibility of a similar contest this year—Harvard Magazine is providing enhanced coverage. We asked each candidate presented by the HAA nominating committee and each member of the Harvard THE MUSE & THE MARKETPLACE 2021 A professor and a marketing professional have teamed up to raise awareness of the climate problem through the nonpartisan, nonprofit Potential Energy Coalition. HARVARD FAS DEAN’S ANNUAL REPORT The acclaimed poet and director of the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and Culture will speak at the annual meeting on June 4—and other graduation-week speakers are announced. ASK A HARVARD PROFESSOR WITH FRANCESCA DOMINICI Discussing the link between air pollution and effects of COVID-19, and the importance of data for rapid public-health responses —with Francesca Dominici, professor of biostatistics at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. HARVARD’S HOUSEZERO, THE BUILDING THAT THINKS Click on arrow at right to view additional images (1 of 4) The large-screen HELIX system, here deployed in Henry Leitner's Computer Science 1 class, makes it possible for an instructor to teach students who are physically present and see students attending class online, without being confined to a small computer screen at a fixed lectern location; the camera follows the professor and assures RECENT BOOKS WITH HARVARD CONNECTIONS After renovation, 60 Oxford Street will become the hub for quantum science and engineering at Harvard. Photograph by Kristina DeMichele/Harvard Magazine. FROM AIDS ACTIVISM TO ART View video from an exhibition at the Harvard Art Museum that explores the visual legacy of ACT UP’s campaign to galvanize action against anew epidemic.
JONATHAN SHAW
Tishman Speyer details the first phase of the “enterprise research campus”—and points to a doubling of the project’s ultimate size.| HARVARD MAGAZINE
Click on arrow at right to view additional images (1 of 4) The large-screen HELIX system, here deployed in Henry Leitner's Computer Science 1 class, makes it possible for an instructor to teach students who are physically present and see students attending class online, without being confined to a small computer screen at a fixed lectern location; the camera follows the professor and assuresCHAPTER & VERSE
MONTAGE not as continuities, but as collections. Within this approach lies a vestigial New Critical assumption that the proper unit of decipherment is not the sequence, but the STARLINK | HARVARD MAGAZINE Seniors hunker down in communal quarantine. A renovated Claverly Hall shines at the center of this aerial view of Adams House, as work continues in other parts of the complex.PLEASE LOG IN
Please note that Harvard Magazine specializes in Class Notes and Obituaries for graduates of the College and GSAS.For information about class notes for other schools (I.E. Harvard Business School, Harvard Law School, Harvard Medical School, etc), click here. For privacy reasons, Harvard Magazine class notes and obituaries are restricted toHarvard alumni.
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Harvard Squared. 6X/year. The editors' curated picks for what to eat, experience, and explore in and around Cambridge HARVARD’S VIRTUAL COMMENCEMENT Harvard’s 369th Commencement goes virtual. THE TANGLED RACIAL HISTORY OF TEXAS Loeb University Professor Annette Gordon-Reed is best known for her Pulitzer Prize-winning history, The Hemingses of Monticello: An American Family.Her slender new book, On Juneteenth (Liveright / W.W. Norton, $15.95), is part history, part memoir and meditation on her own growing up in Texas, the original home to Juneteenth—the commemoration of the June 19, 1865, proclamation that slavery ELIZABETH BANGS BRYANT In 1936, Elizabeth Bangs Bryant had worked at Harvard’s Museum of Comparative Zoology for a few decades, and her expertise was just beginning to gain recognition. Noted for her taxonomic skills in identifying, classifying, and cataloging spiders, Bryant was busy maintaining and cataloguing the museum’s ever-expanding collections.MADISON U. SOWELL
Click on arrow at right to view additional images (1 of 4) Edwin Binney with Helen Willard, curator of the Harvard Theatre Collection, at the exhibition opening for “The Romantic Ballet” in 1966. NOVEMBER-DECEMBER 2005 A professor and a marketing professional have teamed up to raise awareness of the climate problem through the nonpartisan, nonprofit Potential Energy Coalition.MARCH-APRIL 2008
A professor and a marketing professional have teamed up to raise awareness of the climate problem through the nonpartisan, nonprofit Potential Energy Coalition. SEPTEMBER-OCTOBER 2003 Noah Evers ’22 and his grandmother Patricia Greenfield ’62, Ph.D. ’66. Photo by Lauren Greenfield ’87 STARLINK | HARVARD MAGAZINE Seniors hunker down in communal quarantine. A renovated Claverly Hall shines at the center of this aerial view of Adams House, as work continues in other parts of the complex.PLEASE LOG IN
Please note that Harvard Magazine specializes in Class Notes and Obituaries for graduates of the College and GSAS.For information about class notes for other schools (I.E. Harvard Business School, Harvard Law School, Harvard Medical School, etc), click here. For privacy reasons, Harvard Magazine class notes and obituaries are restricted toHarvard alumni.
EMAIL NEWSLETTERS
Harvard Squared. 6X/year. The editors' curated picks for what to eat, experience, and explore in and around Cambridge HARVARD’S VIRTUAL COMMENCEMENT Harvard’s 369th Commencement goes virtual. THE TANGLED RACIAL HISTORY OF TEXAS Loeb University Professor Annette Gordon-Reed is best known for her Pulitzer Prize-winning history, The Hemingses of Monticello: An American Family.Her slender new book, On Juneteenth (Liveright / W.W. Norton, $15.95), is part history, part memoir and meditation on her own growing up in Texas, the original home to Juneteenth—the commemoration of the June 19, 1865, proclamation that slavery ELIZABETH BANGS BRYANT In 1936, Elizabeth Bangs Bryant had worked at Harvard’s Museum of Comparative Zoology for a few decades, and her expertise was just beginning to gain recognition. Noted for her taxonomic skills in identifying, classifying, and cataloging spiders, Bryant was busy maintaining and cataloguing the museum’s ever-expanding collections.MADISON U. SOWELL
Click on arrow at right to view additional images (1 of 4) Edwin Binney with Helen Willard, curator of the Harvard Theatre Collection, at the exhibition opening for “The Romantic Ballet” in 1966. NOVEMBER-DECEMBER 2005 A professor and a marketing professional have teamed up to raise awareness of the climate problem through the nonpartisan, nonprofit Potential Energy Coalition.MARCH-APRIL 2008
A professor and a marketing professional have teamed up to raise awareness of the climate problem through the nonpartisan, nonprofit Potential Energy Coalition. SEPTEMBER-OCTOBER 2003 Noah Evers ’22 and his grandmother Patricia Greenfield ’62, Ph.D. ’66. Photo by Lauren Greenfield ’87 THE MUSE & THE MARKETPLACE 2021 A professor and a marketing professional have teamed up to raise awareness of the climate problem through the nonpartisan, nonprofit Potential Energy Coalition. HARVARD IN ALLSTON: NEW POSSIBILITIES? Time to rethink the campus-development agenda? Reduced expenses offset declines in revenue for FY 2021, helping Harvard avoid the layoffs that have eliminated one in eight jobs within higher education. HARVARD OVERSEER PROSPECTS’ VIEWS In light of the importance of the annual election for members of Harvard’s Board of Overseers—and heightened interest stemming from last year’s vigorously contested results and the possibility of a similar contest this year—Harvard Magazine is providing enhanced coverage. We asked each candidate presented by the HAA nominating committee and each member of the Harvard HARVARD FAS DEAN’S ANNUAL REPORT The acclaimed poet and director of the Smithsonian’s National Museum of African American History and Culture will speak at the annual meeting on June 4—and other graduation-week speakers are announced. HARVARD’S HOUSEZERO, THE BUILDING THAT THINKS Click on arrow at right to view additional images (1 of 4) The large-screen HELIX system, here deployed in Henry Leitner's Computer Science 1 class, makes it possible for an instructor to teach students who are physically present and see students attending class online, without being confined to a small computer screen at a fixed lectern location; the camera follows the professor and assures FROM AIDS ACTIVISM TO ART View video from an exhibition at the Harvard Art Museum that explores the visual legacy of ACT UP’s campaign to galvanize action against anew epidemic.
JONATHAN SHAW
Tishman Speyer details the first phase of the “enterprise research campus”—and points to a doubling of the project’s ultimate size.| HARVARD MAGAZINE
After renovation, 60 Oxford Street will become the hub for quantum science and engineering at Harvard. Photograph by Kristina DeMichele/Harvard Magazine. AGING GRACEFULLY AT HOME As board president of Staying Put in New Canaan, Tom Towers, M.B.A. ’64, believes in self-reliance. The Connecticut organization,modeled
| HARVARD MAGAZINE
Click on arrow at right to view additional images (1 of 4) The large-screen HELIX system, here deployed in Henry Leitner's Computer Science 1 class, makes it possible for an instructor to teach students who are physically present and see students attending class online, without being confined to a small computer screen at a fixed lectern location; the camera follows the professor and assures Your independent source for Harvard news since 1898 | SUBSCRIBELog-In | Register
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> From left: Yvette Efevbera, Natalie Unterstell, and Megan Red> Shirt-Shaw
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> Photographs courtesy of Harvard Forward HARVARD FORWARD UNVEILS SECOND OVERSEER SLATE Three aspirants for election to the Board of Overseers, under its new rules limiting petition candidates11.18.20
> University data from Harvard coronavirus dashboard HBS HALTS HYBRID LEARNING Surging coronavirus cases force move to all-remote instruction.11.18.20
> Cover of _Fevers, Feuds and Diamonds_ by Paul Farmer and Photograph> of Paul Farmer
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> Photograph of Paul Farmer by Stephanie Mitchell/Harvard Public > Affairs and Communication>
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UNDERSTANDING EBOLA
The 2014 epidemic was rooted in centuries of exploitation and war,Paul Farmer argues.
11.17.20
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> Cover of _Fevers, Feuds and Diamonds_ by Paul Farmer and Photograph> of Paul Farmer
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> Photograph of Paul Farmer by Stephanie Mitchell/Harvard Public > Affairs and Communication>
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UNDERSTANDING EBOLA
The 2014 epidemic was rooted in centuries of exploitation and war,Paul Farmer argues.
11.17.20
> Rebecca Henderson REBECCA HENDERSON: DOES CAPITALISM NEED TO BE REIMAGINED? How to reform capitalism to confront climate change and extreme inequality, with economist and McArthur University Professor RebeccaHenderson
11.16.20
AT HOME WITH HARVARD: ELECTION DAY In a year like no other, read a selection of _Harvard Magazine_ stories on the forces that will shape the presidentialelection outcome.
10.29.20
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> Professor of government Dustin Tingley (bottom right), faculty > director of the Harvard Initiative for Learning and Teaching and > deputy vice provost for advances in learning, introduces HILT > conference panelists (clockwise from top left): Sherri Ann > Charleston, Anthony Jack, María Luisa Parra, and Clint Smith. > Screen capture by _Harvard Magazine_/LG “I WANT TO HEAR ABOUT YOU” The Harvard Initiative for Learning and Teaching conference considers classroom inclusion and equity.10.20.20
> Illustration by Mark SteeleYESTERDAY’S NEWS
Headlines from Harvard’s history November-December 2020 > Illustration by Amelia Flower/Folio Art UNIVERSITY FRIENDSHIPS—AND BEYOND The Undergraduate considers friendships on and away from campus. November-December 2020* Alumni
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AT HOME WITH HARVARD: THE ART OF THE PROFILE A selection of our readers’ and writers’ favorite longformprofiles
11.23.20
> From left: Yvette Efevbera, Natalie Unterstell, and Megan Red> Shirt-Shaw
>
> Photographs courtesy of Harvard Forward HARVARD FORWARD UNVEILS SECOND OVERSEER SLATE Three aspirants for election to the Board of Overseers, under its new rules limiting petition candidates11.18.20
> Cover of _Fevers, Feuds and Diamonds_ by Paul Farmer and Photograph> of Paul Farmer
>
> Photograph of Paul Farmer by Stephanie Mitchell/Harvard Public > Affairs and Communication>
>
UNDERSTANDING EBOLA
The 2014 epidemic was rooted in centuries of exploitation and war,Paul Farmer argues.
11.17.20
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more Harvard Squared > Colorful bow ties from The Andover Shop>
> Photograph courtesy of The Andover Shop A NEW TWIST ON HOME FOR THE HOLIDAYS Harvard Square venues offer warmth, cheer, and appetizing fare. November-December 2020 > At first glance, Hammond’s Gloucester home could be mistaken for a > transplanted European castle.>
> Photograph by Lovely Valentine Photography/Courtesy of Hammond> Castle
A MAN AND HIS CASTLE Gothic surroundings, spiritualism, and science: Hammond Castle Museum’s eclectic appeal November-December 2020 > _Meadow with Poplars _(circa 1875)>
> Claude Monet/Courtesy of the Museum of Fine Arts HIP-HOP ART AND FRENCH INNOVATORS Winter exhibits at the Museum of Fine Arts November-December 2020* Opinion
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President Bacow on the engaged upside to online teaching and learning November-December 2020A QUARTET OF CRISES
Educational, financial, political, and values issues challenge Harvard’s leaders—and the University community. November-December 2020 > Illustration by Amelia Flower/Folio Art UNIVERSITY FRIENDSHIPS—AND BEYOND The Undergraduate considers friendships on and away from campus. November-December 2020* Arts
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> A selection from the Forbes Pigment Collection>
> Photograph by Caitlin Cunningham/Courtesy of the Harvard Art > Musuems/©President and Fellows of Harvard College UP CLOSE (VIRTUALLY) WITH THE FORBES PIGMENT COLLECTION Harvard’s world-famous collection of colors can now be enjoyed fromhome.
11.6.20
> Photograph by Fabrizio Amoroso/ApertureSEE THEIR FACES
Confronting “some of the most challenging images in the history ofphotography”
10.22.20
> At first glance, Hammond’s Gloucester home could be mistaken for a > transplanted European castle.>
> Photograph by Lovely Valentine Photography/Courtesy of Hammond> Castle
A MAN AND HIS CASTLE Gothic surroundings, spiritualism, and science: Hammond Castle Museum’s eclectic appeal November-December 2020* Sports
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> Crimson receiver and returner Andrew Fischer breaks loose for a > 58-yard run in the second quarter—one of several huge plays on the> day.
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> Photograph by Barry Chin/_The Boston Globe_ via Getty Images HARVARD GREAT PERFORMANCES: ANDREW FISCHER ’16 A sensational performance leads Harvard over Yale.11.20.20
> The Ivy League logo IVY LEAGUE CANCELS WINTER SEASON The pandemic continues to affect athletics.11.13.20
> Carroll Lowenstein > Photograph courtesy of Peter Mee HARVARD FOOTBALL GREAT PERFORMANCES: CARROLL LOWENSTEIN ’52 A performance for the ages—in just nine throws11.13.20
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> Illustration by Mark SteeleYESTERDAY’S NEWS
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UNDERSTANDING EBOLA
The 2014 epidemic was rooted in centuries of exploitation and war,Paul Farmer argues.
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> Crimson receiver and returner Andrew Fischer breaks loose for a > 58-yard run in the second quarter—one of several huge plays on the> day.
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> Photograph by Barry Chin/_The Boston Globe_ via Getty Images HARVARD GREAT PERFORMANCES: ANDREW FISCHER ’16 A sensational performance leads Harvard over Yale.11.20.20 | Sports
> From left: Yvette Efevbera, Natalie Unterstell, and Megan Red> Shirt-Shaw
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> Photographs courtesy of Harvard Forward HARVARD FORWARD UNVEILS SECOND OVERSEER SLATE Three aspirants for election to the Board of Overseers, under its new rules limiting petition candidates11.18.20 | News
> University data from Harvard coronavirus dashboard HBS HALTS HYBRID LEARNING Surging coronavirus cases force move to all-remote instruction.11.18.20 | News
> Cover of _Fevers, Feuds and Diamonds_ by Paul Farmer and Photograph> of Paul Farmer
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> Photograph of Paul Farmer by Stephanie Mitchell/Harvard Public > Affairs and Communication>
>
UNDERSTANDING EBOLA
The 2014 epidemic was rooted in centuries of exploitation and war,Paul Farmer argues.
11.17.20 | Social Sciences AT HOME WITH HARVARD: HEALTH CARE IN AMERICA Our top stories on the crises in American health care 11.16.20 | At Home with Harvardmore News
LATEST NEWS
AT HOME WITH HARVARD: THE ART OF THE PROFILE A selection of our readers’ and writers’ favorite longformprofiles
11.23.20 | At Home with Harvard > Francesca Dominici FRANCESCA DOMINICI: HOW DOES AIR POLLUTION AFFECT COVID-19? Discussing the link between air pollution and effects of COVID-19, and the importance of data for rapid public-health responses —with Francesca Dominici, professor of biostatistics at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health.11.23.20 |
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> Crimson receiver and returner Andrew Fischer breaks loose for a > 58-yard run in the second quarter—one of several huge plays on the> day.
>
> Photograph by Barry Chin/_The Boston Globe_ via Getty Images HARVARD GREAT PERFORMANCES: ANDREW FISCHER ’16 A sensational performance leads Harvard over Yale.11.20.20 | Sports
> From left: Yvette Efevbera, Natalie Unterstell, and Megan Red> Shirt-Shaw
>
> Photographs courtesy of Harvard Forward HARVARD FORWARD UNVEILS SECOND OVERSEER SLATE Three aspirants for election to the Board of Overseers, under its new rules limiting petition candidates11.18.20 | News
> University data from Harvard coronavirus dashboard HBS HALTS HYBRID LEARNING Surging coronavirus cases force move to all-remote instruction.11.18.20 | News
> Cover of _Fevers, Feuds and Diamonds_ by Paul Farmer and Photograph> of Paul Farmer
>
> Photograph of Paul Farmer by Stephanie Mitchell/Harvard Public > Affairs and Communication>
>
UNDERSTANDING EBOLA
The 2014 epidemic was rooted in centuries of exploitation and war,Paul Farmer argues.
11.17.20 | Social Sciences AT HOME WITH HARVARD: HEALTH CARE IN AMERICA Our top stories on the crises in American health care 11.16.20 | At Home with Harvardmore News
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> Illustration by Amelia Flower/Folio Art John Harvard's Journal UNIVERSITY FRIENDSHIPS—AND BEYOND The Undergraduate considers friendships on and away from campus. November-December 2020 > Ross Douthat sees American society stagnating amid tired culture > wars and a gridlocked political system.>
> Photograph by Stu RosnerFeatures
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