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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.

  • Shingles may increase risk of cognitive decline

    Availability of vaccine offers opportunity to reduce burden of shingles and possible dementia

  • John Manning named next provost

    His seven-year tenure as Law School dean noted for commitments to academic excellence, innovation, collaboration, and culture of free, open, and respectful discourse

  • Finding lessons on power of federally funded childcare for working mothers

    New research by Claudia Goldin takes look at World War II-era Lanham Act

  • Harvard Library acquires copy of ‘Green Book’

    Rare original copy of Jim Crow-era travel guide ‘key document in Black history’

  • How a few Facebook posts brought heat on Ugandan professor 

    Sylvester Danson Kahyana, Congo activist Amani Matabaro Tom finish terms as Scholars at Risk

  • Loving your pup may be a many splendored thing

    New research suggests having connection to your dog may lower depression, anxiety  

  • Looking at how prejudice is learned, passed

    Research suggests power, influence of watching behavior of others

  • Should kids play Wordle?

    Early childhood development expert has news for parents who think the popular online game will turn their children into super readers

  • Aspirin may help cut colorectal cancer risk

    New research suggests those with less healthy lifestyles may get highest benefit from regular use

  • How moms may be affecting STEM gender gap

    Research suggests encouragement toward humanities appears to be very influential for daughters

  • How to help urban young people progress? Nurture hope.

    Youth development specialist promotes holistic approach to healing, growth of individuals, communities amid poverty, drugs, trauma

  • Faster ‘in a dish’ model may speed up treatment for Parkinson’s

    Could result in personalized models to test diagnostic and treatment strategies

  • How did life begin on Earth? A lightning strike of an idea.

    Researchers mimic early conditions on barren planet to test hypothesis of ancient electrochemistry

  • Fixing key flaw in revolutionary cancer treatment

    Researchers devise way to boost CAR T-cell therapy to potentially ensure it doesn’t fade prematurely

  • How they spent their summer vacations

    A look at five projects, including a hunt for stolen coins, tracing history of long closed, Jim Crow-era beach in New Orleans

  • ‘I hope they take their time in their recovery’

    Washington Post journalist Jason Rezaian, held for 544 by Iran, offers advice to three Americans just released by Russia

  • Garber to serve as president through 2026-27 academic year

    Search for successor will launch in 2026

  • Worried about violence, threats as election nears? Just say no.

    Key is for leaders, voters to stand in solidarity against it, political scientists say 

  • Economic prospects brighten for children of low-income Black Americans, study finds

    Opportunity Insights also finds gap widening between whites at top, bottom

  • French officer rushes wife, young children out of Salonica as Nazis near

    In novel rooted in family lore, Claire Messud trails three generations of family with Algerian roots, lives shaped by displacement, war, social and political upheaval

  • We know about the wars. What about the flowers?

    Exhibit tracing multicultural exchanges over three centuries finds common threads and plenty of drama, from crown envy to tulip mania

  • If it feels too hot to run, maybe it is

    Experts who have seen health consequences close-up offer guidelines for summer athletes 

  • Does your brain reflect your sex?

    Precision medicine is just one field where the answer matters

  • Time to send in Goldin

    Nobel laureate lefty gets nod from Sox to throw out first pitch

  • Why would a busy professor take time to reread a book?

    They wade through stacks each year. But here are some that draw them back.

  • Walking children through a garden of good and evil

    Jamaica Kincaid’s new book presents history of colonialism, identity through plants that helped shape it

  • Consider the ancient history and glory of Olympics (and the modern sneaker deal)

    In Greece, students find intersection of academics and athletics

  • More money, empowerment — and less chance of domestic abuse

    Study examines benefits for working women who help produce Rwandan specialty coffee 

  • Tracing roots of hidden language of an outsider minority

    Graduate student aims to update large gaps in research on argot of Irish Travelers

  • Beginning of end of HIV epidemic?

    Scientists cautiously optimistic about trial results of new preventative treatment, prospects for new phase in battle with deadly virus