Conversations
Matthew Meselson
Matthew Meselson handles a petri dish of rotifers in his laboratory. Rotifers are microscopic animals that Meselson is using in his current research on aging.
The Best Vibrations
I chat with Mike Love, the smashingly successful, historically polarizing lead singer of The Beach Boys. To my delight, he begins to sing the chorus of one of his most iconic hits, a tune that he has crooned thousands of times for crowds far larger than his current audience of one: “I'm pickin’ up good vibrations. She's giving me excitations."
Hey Professor: Mindfulness
With midterm season in full swing and more than a month of class under our belts, many of us are stressed. How can we stay calm and focused?
Living the Culture
His home in Assayii, New Mexico, a place named for the red rock of the canyons there, is starkly different from the halls of Harvard. “We live where the pavement ends,” Clark says with a laugh. “Literally, there’s a road that’s called ‘The Road to Nowhere’, and I live further on.”
An Eagle Feather in her Cap
SaNoah S. LaRocque ’19 is a traveler. Before arriving at Harvard last fall, she had attended 13 different schools and lived in towns, cities, and Native-American reservations across the United States.
A Visit to the Harvard Film Archive
Jeremy M. Rossen, assistant curator at the Harvard Film Archive (HFA), wants to bring more students to 24 Quincy St.
15 Minutes with Cedric Woods
J. Cedric Woods, a member of the Lumbee Tribe of North Carolina, is a professor at University of Massachusetts Boston and director of their Institute for New England Native American Studies (INENAS). He is currently serving as one of Pforzheimer House’s Native American fellows.
From Professor to Performer
Dr. Nancy A. Rappaport, a professor at Harvard Medical School, tries her hand at theater with a one-woman show, “Regeneration,” about her experience battling breast cancer.
Abraham Rebollo
Abraham Rebollo ’20 poses with the beehive he keeps in the Pforzheimer House belltower.