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transgender crowd of people seamless pattern. International Transgender Day,31 March. Different people marching on the pride parade. Human rights.transgender person.transgender pride flag. transgender Pride month concept.Online Dating.

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Alexander Dyer.

Quo modo autem philosophus loquitur? Tecum optime, deinde etiam cum mediocri amico. Invidiosum nomen est, infame, suspectum.

Alexander Dyer.

Quo modo autem philosophus loquitur? Tecum optime, deinde etiam cum mediocri amico. Invidiosum nomen est, infame, suspectum.

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Alexander Dyer.

Quo modo autem philosophus loquitur? Tecum optime, deinde etiam cum mediocri amico. Invidiosum nomen est, infame, suspectum.

  • Breaking ground on a groundbreaking project

    City and University leaders celebrate mixed-use development in Allston

  • How opium, imperialism boosted Chinese art trade

    Harvard Art Museums exhibition chronicles history, explores lessons for U.S. drug crisis

  • ‘Sharing scholarship in many different registers’

    George Aumoithe rings the bell teaching history, exploring electronic music

  • Research shows working out gets inflammation-fighting T cells moving

    Activated by regular exercise, immune cells in muscles found to fend off inflammation, enhance endurance in mice

  • Champion, creator of American theater

    Robert Brustein, founder of rep companies at Harvard and Yale, recalled as teacher, critic, mentor, innovator

  • ‘We had to create something new — and we did’

    Ahead of Harvard visit, two legends of hip-hop recall New York beginnings

  • 147 sworn in as U.S. citizens at Harvard Business School

    Dean commends ‘determination, commitment, and courage’ of honorees hailing from 40-plus countries

  • Refreshing Harvard’s halls and walls to reflect ‘21st-century ethos’

    Campus curator Brenda Tindal discusses plans to update spaces while honoring past

  • U.S. hurtles toward new record for mass shootings

    Steven Dettelbach cites advances in gun technology, lack of restrictions on access, says change will come when Americans demand it.

  • Capturing curiosity

    Harvard labs open their doors to let a photographer record the essence of discovery

  • Should we be worried about rising heat of political discourse? Yes.

    Some analysts fear it could lead to violence; others note nation has had other worrisome periods; all agree it’s not a good trend for democracy.

  • How Mitt Romney found himself alone in Republican Party

    New book traces path of scion of prominent GOP family from Harvard M.B.A. to Bain & Co., Mass. State House, U.S. Senate amid rise of Trump.

  • Celebrating Mass STEM Week with astrophysics and AI

    “Astronomy Is for All of Us: Celebrating Women Astrophysicists and the History of Cosmic Discovery” recognized Mass STEM week, a statewide effort to boost high schoolers’ interest in and awareness of science, technology, engineering, and math.

  • Other countries put lives before guns. Why can’t we?

    Harvard Chan School’s David Hemenway on the rampage in Maine, how ordinary citizens should respond, and the question he hears from horrified students new to the U.S.

  • How facial-recognition app poses threat to privacy, civil liberties

    New York Times tech reporter examines case of face-recognition software firm, repercussions for privacy, civil liberties, particularly involving law enforcement, social media.

  • Like a Kardashian of the Roosevelt era

    Student-written, -directed musical explores, celebrates life of Teddy’s daughter Alice Lee, cousin Eleanor.

  • Peabody Museum charts progress on repatriation

    NAGPRA project staff doubled to support three-year commitment for consultation, return of all ancestors and associated funerary belongings.

  • Graham Blanks can really motor

    First-place finishes pile up for rising cross-country star, who talks about team, goals — and that time he passed the lead car.

  • Your period started. Of course the tampon dispenser is empty.

    All-too-familiar frustration for women sparked campaign to make menstrual products in campus bathrooms as basic an expectation as toilet paper.

  • Why so many blue-collar workers drifted away from Democratic Party

    New book puts mid-century unions at center of Rust Belt identity and social life. Shifting economy splintered community and fostered disillusionment.

  • ‘Shark Tank’s’ Kevin O’Leary talks startups and setbacks

    The celebrity entrepreneur explained what it takes for a founder to develop a product or service, raise capital from investors, and grow from a small business into a larger enterprise.

  • How to prepare for a trip to space

    Astronauts spend years training for missions. How do commercial travelers get ready?

  • Hearth and home — in Stone Age

    Motivating Professor Amy Elizabeth Clark’s interest is what she calls a “feminist approach” to studying human history.

  • Cellular atlas guides new understanding of brain

    New technology gives voice to pathologic changes in neurodegenerative illnesses like Alzheimer’s and epilepsy.

  • How being stigmatized can harm health

    Professor of Psychology Mark L. Hatzenbuehler’s course, “Stigma, Discrimination, and Health,” examines the wide-ranging problem that touches on sexuality, body weight, immigration, and poverty.

  • Who will fight for the frogs?

    Indian herpetologists bring their life’s work to Harvard just as study shows a world hostile to the fate of amphibians.

  • Hot yoga potent antidepressant in study

    In a randomized controlled clinical trial, heated yoga sessions led to reduced depressive symptoms in adults with moderate-to-severe depression.

  • Erasing reminders of stigmatizing, traumatic past

    Harvard Medical School-Mass General dermatologists use lasers to remove gang, trafficking tattoos, stigmatizing and often traumatic reminders of the past.

  • Using math as bridge within disciplines

    Center of Mathematical Sciences and Applications welcomes new director, a Harvard alum who will explore “beautiful, deep” interactions between mathematics and science.

  • Worries about depressed men and IVF are unfounded

    New study reveals no correlation between anxiety, regardless of antidepressant use, and IVF outcomes or live birth rate.