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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.

  • A three-way player: Offense, defense, and design

    Economics concentrator, Crimson guard also sells custom sneakers to college, pro athletes

  • The problem with knowing everything

    ‘Rigor of Angels’ author explains how a Borges character with perfect memory illuminates work of Heisenberg, Kant

  • Lesson about election night for media? Winner should be American democracy.

    News outlets taking greater care in close, fraught contest, experts say, but moving away from horse-race coverage is healthy idea anyway

  • Preserving Indigenous languages is personal

    Ava Silva ’27 working with WOLF Lab to document, study, and preserve the Alabama language of the Alabama-Coushatta Tribe

  • ‘I wanted to make a difference in America’

    Robert Putnam’s ‘Bowling Alone’ sounded an alarm we still haven’t answered

  • Why it’s become harder to project presidential winner on election night

    Elections and public opinion expert details lessons learned since 2000, rise of absentee voting

  • ‘A sense of illumination, if not calm, about the fate of American democracy’

    Social Science faculty lend insight, analysis ahead of election

  • Bot’s literary analysis wasn’t ‘brilliantly original’ — is that beside the point?

    Writers Claire Messud, Laura Kipnis debate AI’s merits as a reading companion

  • IGs oversee most federal agencies. Why not the Supreme Court?

    Inspector general would boost accountability, trust in federal judiciary, argues Glenn Fine in talk promoting new book, ‘Watchdogs’

  • Time for ‘emergence of a new and better democracy’

    Civil rights attorney and Howard professor Sherrilyn Ifill details need for national reckoning, greater civic involvement

  • Warning for younger women: Be vigilant on breast cancer risk

    Pathologist explains the latest report from the American Cancer Society

  • ‘Dark things can be quite illuminating’

    Horror writing instructor defends prestige of ‘genre that bites back’

  • Putting a face on the importance of voting

    ‘Vote!’ exhibition honors those who fought for civil rights

  • Lessons learned from being only man in class

    Or how a gender-equality seminar sparked change for women in Côte d’Ivoire

  • Grappling with how clearings may support rainforest animal life

    New research offers detailed overview of layout, makeup of canopy gaps in Congo

  • Art in motion

    Stroboscopic technique uses darkness to shine light on the science of movement

  • Scarier than ghosts: A nurse superfan and a spouse with secret rooms

    Steven Pinker, Maria Tatar, other scholars recommend books for Halloween season

  • Amid Hurricane Milton’s devastation, a sliver of good news

    Cellphone data suggest evacuation mandates, warning systems worked

  • From the forest to a leaf

    New Herbaria director studies plants via satellite and microscope for insights on changing planet

  • Threads of generosity: A family’s quilted legacy

    Robert and Ardis James created a culture of philanthropy within the James family that has spanned generations

  • So who knew Goliath threw the fight for cash?

    Comedy writer Simon Rich talks about turning life into funny fiction, offers tips for young writers

  • Key to negotiated peace in Ukraine? Having the West keep Russia honest.

    Former defense minister says U.S., allies need to continue financial, arms aid, remove curbs on missiles to bring Putin to table

  • Mars may have been habitable much more recently than thought

    Study bolsters theory that protective magnetic field supporting life-enabling atmosphere remained in place longer than estimates

  • Study shows vitamin D doesn’t cut cardiac risk

    Outdoor physical activity may be a better target for preventive intervention, says researcher

  • Weight-loss surgery down 25 percent as anti-obesity drug use soars

    Study authors call for more research examining how trend affects long-term patient outcomes

  • World appears on track for even more dangerous Cold War 2.0

    Pulitzer winner warns China, which is building nuclear arsenal, would be third major player besides U.S., Russia — and six other nations now have bombs, too.

  • Outside of the U.S., how do leaders view Harris and Trump?

    Weatherhead panelists offer insights on geopolitical stakes of presidential election

  • Your side might lose. But you don’t have to lose your mind.

    Political engagement is healthy. Doomscrolling? Not so much.

  • Add some drama to your wardrobe

    A.R.T. sells off costumes dating to 1980s, attracting thrifters and theater-lovers alike

  • How to fight depression? Faster.

    Hope flags when medications fail, isolating and endangering patients. Backed by a major grant, 2 Harvard scientists are focused on reducing the distance between diagnosis and recovery.