Contributing writer
Vivian W. Rong
Latest Content
Most Likely to Be President: Laila Nasher
Laila’s interest in political organizing is deeply personal. She grew up in a socially conservative Yemeni-American community in Detroit where most young people did not attend college.
Resurrecting Film Photography in the Eliot House Basement
When Elmer and Social Studies lecturer Bonnie Talbert stepped into the position of Eliot’s faculty deans earlier this year, they wanted to bring a piece of themselves into House life. So Elmer decided to resurrect the abandoned Eliot darkroom and teach a House seminar on film photography.
Advice to Josh: When Does Winter End?
As the weather fluctuates between the 30s and high 50s, and as the weeks hurtle by, it seems like spring should be coming. The air is slowly getting warmer, on average, and there are some buds starting to burst forth on bare branches. Still, Cambridge seems dreary and gray, and the midterm slump certainly isn't helping the sense of endless winter. So we're here to give Josh advice on knowing when exactly winter ends.
Pedal to the Metal at Cabot’s Quad Bikes
“Having someone walk in with a broken bike and walk out with a fixed bike — there are few things I've done at this university that have made people so instantly happy,” says Quad Bikes manager Julian K. Li ’25.
Surviving Harvard Survivor
As the day went on, players made alliances, found immunity idols, and won immunity challenges as they were voted off each tribal council.
naomi oreskes portrait
Naomi Oreskes is a professor of the History of Science and is an affiliated professor of Earth and Planetary Sciences at Harvard University.
Josh Caven image
Joshua G. Caven '24 is involved with stand-up comedy, improvisational comedy, and technical theater on campus.
Julia Grullon image
Julia K. Grullon '24 is the 2023 President of the Harvard-Radcliffe Dramatic Club.
The Strange History of Fake Harvard Students
Although social media was set ablaze this year with rumors of an impostor, there are records of people pretending to be Harvard freshman as far back as the 1960s.