Alumni+ Big Shot Billie Weiss is living out a major-league dream as manager of photography for the World Champion Boston Red Sox Video
On Campus+ Bricks of Life Biologist and Lego collector Cynthia Bradham finds inspiration in the tiny building blocks of life Video
Alumni10 Rahul Desikan's Story of Love, Science, and Facing Down Death This pioneering neuroscientist was attacking ALS. Then ALS attacked him. Video
Books+ Exploring Endurance Best-selling author David Grann (GRS’94) on one man’s obsessive quest to cross Antarctica
June 18, 2019Know What’s Good for Your Health? Artificial IntelligenceData and algorithms can spot medical concerns early and point to solutions
June 12, 2019Crowdsourcing a Second Bill of Rights? ENG Professor Wants to Give It a ShotGreg Blonder says our leaders often obstruct the public’s will
June 10, 2019A Dead Humpback, a Team of Scientists, a Race for AnswersDid noise pollution in the ocean contribute to her death in the waters off Cape Cod? Her whale ears may hold important clues
June 10, 2019Shari Davis (Sargent’10,’12) among 20 Obama Fellows Named Worldwide“The Obamas represent…the reality that ceilings can and should be broken”
June 6, 2019Natick’s World War II Museum Commemorates 75th Anniversary of D-DayFounder Ken Rendell, who studied business at BU, has created special exhibition
June 4, 2019Stan Sclaroff Named Dean of Arts & SciencesAfter nationwide search, interim dean chosen for strong and consistent leadership
October 30, 2018 20 Years Later Favorite Poem Project Comes Home to BU Members of the BU community share their choices in new series of videos
June 1, 2018 Straying: The Story of a Marriage, an Affair, the Aftermath Molly McCloskey (GRS’20) talks about her 2018 novel
March 29, 2018 Weike Wang Wins Whiting Award A PhD’s novel about a PhD student takes emerging writer prize
January 31, 2018 Outer Worlds and Inner Lives In Jessica Keener’s Strangers in Budapest, family mysteries mingle with the city’s haunting past
January 23, 2018 CAS Biology Professor Pens First Thriller Geoffrey Cooper’s novel tackles envy and greed among scientists