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New study shows how pelvis evolved for walking upright, allowing birth of offspring with larger brains
Study upends common myths around melatonin, weekends, school start times
Events examine what can be done to address grinding problem of race, internet’s power to exploit political, cultural schisms to destructive ends
Zelensky talks Russia strategy, nuclear threat, Ukrainian unity, leadership lessons during Kennedy School talk
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Harvard University and a rainbow provide the backdrop for Harvard Square.
Rose Lincoln/Harvard Staff Photographer
By Jon Chase Harvard Staff Photographer
How to describe Harvard Square? Busy and bustling with bikes and buses, cars and crowds, trucks and kick-scooters fighting for space on streets and crossways. Intimate with its hidden alleys and entryways, venerable (quirky tobacconist Leavitt and Peirce), modern (a fine wine shop, a cannabis boutique), upscale (Harvest Restaurant), and working-class (late-night standby Charlie’s Kitchen). Preppies in polo shirts and grunge punks in ragged jeans, coffee-table books and counter-culture comics, tweedy professors and four-year drop-ins and the drop-outs who never left … in short, the Square epitomizes all that’s eclectic, and that is precisely why we like it. With stylistic contrasts at every corner, the energy here is catching, challenging us to understand how the pieces all fit. Some changes have taken place. But with that has come new blood, places like Flour Bakery, the interior green walls and array of cafés and restaurants at Harvard’s own Smith Campus Center. Life goes on, changed but vigorous, in Harvard Square.
A man browses used books for sale on the brick terrace at the Harvard Square T Station. Harvard Square.
Jon Chase/Harvard Staff Photographer
Christos Soillis, the owner of Felix Shoe Repair in Harvard Square since 1969. Personable and hard-working, Soillis stitches, mends, and dyes anything made of leather, including belts, handbags, saddlebags, jackets ... and shoes, of course.
Jon Chase/Harvard Staff Photographer
Harvard Square’s brick sidewalks are always filled with foot traffic.
Jon Chase/Harvard Staff Photographer
A street evangelist, one of many who pop up in the Square from time to time.
Jon Chase/Harvard Staff Photographer
Calum Walter and his Vibe Check Band perform by the Harvard Coop on a cool but sunny weekday afternoon.
Jon Chase/Harvard Staff Photographer
A fan of Fauci — that’s director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases Anthony Fauci — dines on an unseasonably warm February day. A cut-steel street map of the Square, showing the footprints of buildings, marks the entrance to 25 JFK Street.
Photos by Rose Lincoln and Jon Chase/Harvard Staff Photographers
A scooter whizzes up Massachusetts Avenue.
Rose Lincoln/Harvard Staff Photographer
Halloween 2021 makes a mark in the Square.
Photos by Rose Lincoln/Harvard Staff Photographer
Halloween revelers walked up Mount Auburn Street during last year's festivities.
Rose Lincoln/Harvard Staff Photographer
Silhouetted late-night travelers enter and exit the Harvard T Station in the Square.
Jon Chase/Harvard Staff Photographer
Pigeons (and a few sparrows) hang out along the ledges of the building housing CVS in the middle of Harvard Square. A photo of the uniquely designed Harvard Lampoon building is reflected in the window.
Jon Chase/Harvard Staff Photographer
“The Dutchman” plays his keyboard on Palmer Street on a summer evening. Dutch played and lectured at Harvard many years ago as part of a professor’s course on bringing the blues to a new generation. The Square has been a common venue for street performers for generations.
Jon Chase/Harvard Staff Photographer
A jogger runs past an oversized, ivy-decorated “H” outside the Harvard Coop, long a fixture in the Square. Two green-legged men walk up Plympton Street past Leverett Hou
Photos by Jon Chase and Rose Lincoln/Harvard Staff Photographer
Holiday decorations in Harvard Square. A street musician wearing a Santa hat plays with his band in the run-up to the holidays
Photos by Jon Chase/Harvard Staff Photograph
Students inside Peets Coffee can look up for a view of the Square in the snow.
Rose Lincoln/Harvard Staff Photographer
Events examine what can be done to address grinding problem of race, internet’s power to exploit political, cultural schisms to destructive ends
New study shows how pelvis evolved for walking upright, allowing birth of offspring with larger brains
Study upends common myths around melatonin, weekends, school start times
There has also been a “philosophical shift in archival practice at Harvard,” said Virginia “Ginny” Hunt. “Now, compared to years or decades ago, we are focusing our attention on the need for inclusivity.”
Jon Chase/Harvard Staff Photographer