Harvard Will Fight Trump’s Demands

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Harvard Will Fight Trump’s Demands

Harvard will not comply with the Trump administration’s demands to dismantle its diversity programming and limit student protests in exchange for its federal funding, University President Alan M. Garber ’76 announced in a message to affiliates Monday afternoon.

Trump Administration Conditions Harvard’s Funding on Eliminating DEI, Restricting Protests

The Trump administration demanded that Harvard eliminate diversity, equity, and inclusion programming, ban masks at protests, and agree to cooperate with the Department of Homeland Security to avoid cuts to its federal funding.

Fifteen Questions: Caroline M. Elkins on Liberal Imperialism, Running in the Kenyan Highlands, and “The Crown”

The Professor of History and African American Studies sat down with Fifteen Minutes to talk about the two-sided coin of liberalism, her undergraduate years at Princeton, and her favorite historically inaccurate television shows.

The Archives of Mira Nair

Only a few decades later, the archives of Mira Nair's own artistic career have a home at the Radcliffe Institute’s Schlesinger Library, where you can see for yourself the gray boxes that include her undergraduate exams a few manila folders away from The New Yorker articles and lists of awards, all testaments to a life of activism and art.

Under One God: Bible Studies Across Harvard’s Campus

Bible studies across campus don’t just provide social spaces for students — they are also part of Harvard’s academic fabric.

New Cancer Hospital for Dana Farber Leaves Healthcare Experts Skeptical

When the Dana Farber Cancer Institute announced that it was opening a new, $1.7 billion, 300-bed inpatient cancer hospital in 2028 along with Beth Israel Deaconess Hospital, the announcement seemed to promise good news for the region. But healthcare experts aren’t so sure.

Former Birzeit President Accuses Harvard of Bowing to Pressure by Cutting Ties with His University

Former Birzeit University President Beshara Doumani slammed Harvard’s decision to cut ties with the Palestinian university as an act of political appeasement after speaking at the History Department’s Palestinian History event on Friday.

‘A Nice Send-Off Concert:’ HRO Performs For Students, Teachers At K-Lo

This year, the Harvard-Radcliffe Orchestra has performed orchestral masterpieces, from Shostakovich’s Symphony No. 11 to excerpts from Gustav Holst’s “The Planets.” Now, the ensemble can add the viral Russian meme song “Sigma Sigma Boy” to their repertoire.




‘A Minecraft Movie’ Review: Crafting a Subpar Result from an Enchanting Premise

If “A Minecraft Movie” is anything, it’s weird.

‘Dream Count’ Review: Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s Latest Characters Grapple with Shades of the Unknown

“Dream Count” brings its women’s struggle with the unknown to a poignant head, resulting in a complex exploration of identity and belonging.

Artist Profile: Camryn Suzanne Knows What Happened to Your Fave

In her video essays, Suzanne analyzes the careers and trends of pop culture’s haves, have-nots, and has-beens.

The Lydian String Quartet and ‘Time's Echo Live’: An Interweaving of Narratives, Memories, and Shostakovich’s Music

Eichler and the Lydian Quartet invited the audience into a space where memory was not only preserved, but actively reawakened.


Harvard Baseball Splits Weather-Shortened Series with Princeton After Near No-Hitter from Pauley

Defense reigned supreme as Harvard baseball split its doubleheader against Princeton on Friday. After dropping the first game 1-0, sophomore Truman Pauley took a no-hitter into the 9th inning as the Crimson rebounded with a 3-2 victory.

Harvard Women’s Tennis Dominates Yale, Clinches Ivy League Title

Harvard women’s tennis (13-8, 5-0 Ivy) claimed the 2025 Ivy League championship following a dominant 4-1 victory over Yale on senior day, its first since 2017 and 20th in team history.

Building a Legacy: How Two Harvard Grads Are Changing the Game for Women’s Soccer in Boston

Ami Kuan Danoff ’84 and Stephanie Connaughton ’87 never knew each other in college. Now, they are bringing women's soccer back to Boston together.

No. 22 Harvard Women’s Lacrosse Falls to Cornell in 13-12 Heartbreaker

Despite an impressive fourth-quarter effort, No. 22 Harvard women’s lacrosse fell just short to Cornell in a cold and rainy game on Schoellkopf Field on Saturday.


‘A Minecraft Movie’ Review: Crafting a Subpar Result from an Enchanting Premise

If “A Minecraft Movie” is anything, it’s weird.

‘Dream Count’ Review: Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s Latest Characters Grapple with Shades of the Unknown

“Dream Count” brings its women’s struggle with the unknown to a poignant head, resulting in a complex exploration of identity and belonging.

Artist Profile: Camryn Suzanne Knows What Happened to Your Fave

In her video essays, Suzanne analyzes the careers and trends of pop culture’s haves, have-nots, and has-beens.

The Lydian String Quartet and ‘Time's Echo Live’: An Interweaving of Narratives, Memories, and Shostakovich’s Music

Eichler and the Lydian Quartet invited the audience into a space where memory was not only preserved, but actively reawakened.



Harvard Baseball Splits Weather-Shortened Series with Princeton After Near No-Hitter from Pauley

Defense reigned supreme as Harvard baseball split its doubleheader against Princeton on Friday. After dropping the first game 1-0, sophomore Truman Pauley took a no-hitter into the 9th inning as the Crimson rebounded with a 3-2 victory.

Harvard Women’s Tennis Dominates Yale, Clinches Ivy League Title

Harvard women’s tennis (13-8, 5-0 Ivy) claimed the 2025 Ivy League championship following a dominant 4-1 victory over Yale on senior day, its first since 2017 and 20th in team history.

Building a Legacy: How Two Harvard Grads Are Changing the Game for Women’s Soccer in Boston

Ami Kuan Danoff ’84 and Stephanie Connaughton ’87 never knew each other in college. Now, they are bringing women's soccer back to Boston together.

No. 22 Harvard Women’s Lacrosse Falls to Cornell in 13-12 Heartbreaker

Despite an impressive fourth-quarter effort, No. 22 Harvard women’s lacrosse fell just short to Cornell in a cold and rainy game on Schoellkopf Field on Saturday.