Conversations
15 Very Earnest Minutes with the Crimson Consulting Club
"It’s students like you who have changed my entire perspective on the world, but aside from that, motivated me on a daily basis, making me reflect on my entire life."
The Ideas Man
What makes him memorable is the unbridled, effervescent energy that follows in the wake of his takeoff. The pajamas also help.
Musicians of the World, Unite!
That’s because the city’s protest scene is frequented by the Boston Area Brigade of Activist Musicians, a self-described “fire brigade of musicians” that can show up at any protest at a moment’s notice.
VES Better Have My Money
For Cohen, the commercialization of art exists as a necessity. In a sense, the limitations of the policy prepare students for a life of professional artistry. Sacrifices of artistic vision are constantly made due to affordability.
High Profile: Harvard Students on The League
He had gone on date after date, shifting from Tinder to Grindr to Bumble and back, but the connections all felt “shoddy.”
When The President Took A Seat
Though the chair’s course through Harvard’s history is vacuous at best, its role in Harvard’s presidential tradition is iconic today.
Courtside Hustle
Maureen Tang acknowledges the intensity of dancing for a stadium with a capacity to seat 20,000, particularly since the event can be televised to “millions” more.
Back to Boston: The Office of Returning Citizens
FM sat down with Kevin R. Sibley, who works to reintegrate the 3,000 individuals who return to Boston each year from incarceration.
Behind @PoeticPoison
Caroline R. Kaufman’s ’21 Instagram account @PoeticPoison now has more than 200,000 followers, but it started as a secret.
'A Living Fossil'
“People still talk about it, because it really is an exemplar of collaboration, of discovery,” he continues, as we stare up the trunk through the (now bare) branches.
WDHPD?
In a time with so much talk about who the next president will be, it is logical to wonder: Do people actually know what Harvard's president does?
'Swimming with Sharks'
Academia’s #MeToo movement doesn’t entirely look like Hollywood’s—at least, not yet.
#MeToo in the Academy
Proclaiming “me, too” means something different on a campus than it does on a screen.
American Lyricist
Amanda S. C. Gorman '20 is the first Youth Poet Laureate of the United States and a self-described future candidate for the U.S. presidency.
Hey Professor: Tell Us About Korea's Unified Olympic Team
"It’s very important that the two Koreas are taking the initiative themselves to resolve the problem. That, to me, is a very hopeful thing."
Fifteen Minutes with Randi H. Griffin ’10
Fifteen Minutes caught up with Randi H. Griffin '10 in the midst of her preparation for the upcoming Olympic games in PyeongChang, where she will be playing for the unified Korean team.
Amanda Gorman (front)
Amanda Gorman was awarded for her poetry as the nation's first-ever Youth Poet Laureate.
American Lyricist
Amanda S. C. Gorman '20 poses Sunday afternoon in downtown Los Angeles. Gorman is the nation's first Youth Poet Laureate.
Talking Punk Rock at Schlesinger Library
Hothead Paisan, Homicidal Lesbian Terrorist, isn’t your everyday comic-book hero. And “Altered Gazes,” the Schlesinger Library exhibition in which this 1991 comic is featured, is not your everyday collection.
A Conversation with Harvard’s First Muslim Chaplain
From the Fifteen Minute Magazine: Khalil Abdur-Rashid is four months into his role as the first full-time Muslim chaplain at Harvard University.