The Weight of Lightweight Rowing

It is an open secret that lightweight rowing can promote disordered eating. But the category persists as a collegiate sport, and Harvard is one of the few schools that offers it.

Ed Childs Didn’t Plan to Come to Harvard. After 50 Years, He’s Still Organizing Its Workers.

Over a half-century of organizing, he has seen the union through two strikes, participated in dozens of demonstrations, and traversed the globe in search of other workers’ stories.



After Trump’s Proclamation, International Harvard Affiliates Were Held at Logan Airport. Some Were Turned Away.

A Friday court filing by Harvard International Office director of immigration services Maureen Martin documented how Harvard affiliates — including an Israeli professor, a CEO, and students and researchers from India, China, and Germany — were turned back by consulates and at Boston Logan.

Rejecting Grad Union’s Title IX Request, Harvard Asks To Ban External Arbitration in All Discrimination Cases

As it negotiates with its graduate student union, Harvard is looking to excise contract language that lays out antidiscrimination protections and instead shift authority over complaints to policies and procedures maintained by the University.

Harvard’s Chief Technology Development Officer Steps Down After 20 Years

Isaac T. Kohlberg will step down from his role as Harvard’s chief technology development officer at the end of 2025, concluding a 20-year tenure during which he established and expanded the office that helps Harvard affiliates commercialize their research.





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‘The Light in the Piazza’ Review: Love is Blonde

Even if the show doesn’t live up to auditory expectations, “The Light in the Piazza” is a feast for the eyes.

‘Is a River Alive?’ Review: A Stilted Love Letter to the Natural World

Ecological, nonfiction work "Is A River Alive?" explores the animacy and integrity of nature, but suffers from awkward pseudo-poetic statements.

Artist Profile: Jay Shetty On Meaningful Conversations and the ‘On Purpose Live Tour’

Jay Shetty — monk, life coach, author, and podcast host — has spent his life developing a strong sense of purpose. Now, he's helping others find theirs.

Artist Profile: Michael Cimino on “Until Dawn,” New Music, and Latino Leadership in TV and Film

Even throughout the difficulties he has faced, Cimino wouldn’t trade his life in the spotlight for any other.


Ice, Ice, Baby: Thompson is Men’s Hockey’s Youngest Star

Freshman Mick Thompson might not have been at Harvard for long, but he's already made his mark in rebuilding the Men's Ice Hockey program — winning himself the title of Male Rookie of the Year in the process.

Parting Shot: Bringing Communities to Life

My dad tells me that sports bring a community together — that today more than ever two people living in the same town, state, or region might only have sports to connect them.

Making a Splash: Ted Minnis Wins Coach of the Year

Ted Minnis has had the rare opportunity to build not one, but two strong programs at Harvard. Coaching both the men's and women's water polo teams, Minnis led both teams to successful seasons.

From 4–20 to Ivy Final: Behind Strong Pitching, Harvard Baseball “Proves The World Wrong”

After Harvard's baseball team faced a 4-21 start to the season, it knew things had to change to keep its season alive. Then, as Truman Pauley took the mound that afternoon, his performance ignited an improbable postseason run.


‘The Light in the Piazza’ Review: Love is Blonde

Even if the show doesn’t live up to auditory expectations, “The Light in the Piazza” is a feast for the eyes.

‘Is a River Alive?’ Review: A Stilted Love Letter to the Natural World

Ecological, nonfiction work "Is A River Alive?" explores the animacy and integrity of nature, but suffers from awkward pseudo-poetic statements.

Artist Profile: Jay Shetty On Meaningful Conversations and the ‘On Purpose Live Tour’

Jay Shetty — monk, life coach, author, and podcast host — has spent his life developing a strong sense of purpose. Now, he's helping others find theirs.

Artist Profile: Michael Cimino on “Until Dawn,” New Music, and Latino Leadership in TV and Film

Even throughout the difficulties he has faced, Cimino wouldn’t trade his life in the spotlight for any other.



Ice, Ice, Baby: Thompson is Men’s Hockey’s Youngest Star

Freshman Mick Thompson might not have been at Harvard for long, but he's already made his mark in rebuilding the Men's Ice Hockey program — winning himself the title of Male Rookie of the Year in the process.

Parting Shot: Bringing Communities to Life

My dad tells me that sports bring a community together — that today more than ever two people living in the same town, state, or region might only have sports to connect them.

Making a Splash: Ted Minnis Wins Coach of the Year

Ted Minnis has had the rare opportunity to build not one, but two strong programs at Harvard. Coaching both the men's and women's water polo teams, Minnis led both teams to successful seasons.

From 4–20 to Ivy Final: Behind Strong Pitching, Harvard Baseball “Proves The World Wrong”

After Harvard's baseball team faced a 4-21 start to the season, it knew things had to change to keep its season alive. Then, as Truman Pauley took the mound that afternoon, his performance ignited an improbable postseason run.