News

Court partially dismisses lawsuit alleging MIT of tolerating antisemitism

On Jan. 5, Massachusetts district judge Richard G. Stearns granted a motion to dismiss some of the accusations against the Institute in the case Sussman v. MIT.

News

MIT admits 655 early action applicants to the Class of 2030

This year’s early action acceptance rate was one of the more competitive in recent memory.

News

Professor Nuno Loureiro shot and killed in Brookline home

Nuno Loureiro, the director of MIT’s Plasma Science and Fusion Center and professor of nuclear science and engineering and physics, died Tuesday morning.

News

Renee Good’s death sparks Boston protests against ICE and Trump

On Saturday, Jan. 10, hundreds of people assembled in Boston Common at noon near the State House to protest ICE operations and demand justice for the death of Renee Nicole Good.

News

UA Judicial Review Board upholds Ellis’s removal as UA representative

On Jan. 9, 2026, the UA Judicial Review Board published their final opinion, unanimously upholding Enoch Ellis ’26’s removal as the UA representative for SGFC.

News

AMD CEO Lisa Su to give the Institute’s 2026 Commencement address

On May 28, 2026, Lisa Su ’90 SM ’91 PhD ’94 will deliver MIT’s 2026 Commencement address at the OneMIT Commencement Ceremony.

News

MIT Facilities seeks to enhance campus green space, sustainability as it looks towards future

Over the past few years, MIT has actively tried to “strengthen the campus tree canopy” and improve sustainability while still being “cost-conscious,” shared Monica Lee, Communications Director for Campus Services and Stewardship.

News

Frank Gehry, architect of MIT’s Stata Center, dies at 96

Frank Gehry, a world-renowned architect, died on Dec. 5 at the age of 96. Gehry was famous for his postmodernist architectural style, which manifested itself in buildings like the Guggenheim Museum and MIT’s very own Stata Center.

News

Institute Professor Paula Hammond appointed next School of Engineering dean

Paula T. Hammond ’84 PhD ’93 will serve as the next dean of the School of Engineering, Provost Chandrakasan announced on Friday, Dec. 5. She will be the first woman to serve as dean of MIT’s largest school.

News

MIT to close multiple libraries in budget rebalancing

Facing a $300 million annual budget shortfall, MIT looks to rebalance its budget through department cuts, revenue increases, and salary freezes.

Science

The bacterial fugitives behind hospital-acquired pneumonia

Hospital-acquired 'A. baumannii' infections are notoriously hard to treat. A new study shows how these microbes can prolong infection by hiding from antibiotics inside immune cells.

Science

Paper folding blends math, art, and science at OrigaMIT 2025

On Saturday, Nov. 15, the 2025 Annual OrigaMIT convention took place at the Stratton Student Center, letting MIT students access a wealth of origami displays by the MIT Origami Club and visiting guests.

Science

MIT Science Bowl turns ten

At MIT, Science Bowl is more than just a competition

11200 nutcracker dancer
Ji Young Chae and Jeffrey Cirio in Mikko Nissinen’s 'The Nutcracker.' Photo courtesy of Brooke Trisolini/Boston Ballet
ballet review

Boston Ballet’s ‘Nutcracker’ returns for the holiday season

For anyone seeking to embrace the holiday spirit, this production remains an absolute must-see.

Arts

Berklee students bring Coldplay’s spectacle to life

With glowing wristbands, powerful vocals, and a stage full of musicians and dancers, Berklee students transformed a concert hall into a Coldplay universe.

concert review

MIT Vocal Jazz Ensemble performs their fall collection

Before the performance began, VJE director Laura Grill Jaye encouraged the audience to whistle, clap, jazz moan along, and lean fully into the looseness of jazz.

addala for your thoughts

I went to the museum

In an age of often vapid and insular internet islands, it makes you sound so intellectual and sophisticated when you respond nonchalantly to the question of “What did you do this weekend?” with “I went to the museum.”

humans of mit

Kip Clark Convos

MIT students are always in motion, but what do we miss when we never pause? A conversation with Kip Clark, known for his “Free Listening” sign, reveals what’s at stake.

jojo’s bizarre musings

Have we forgotten the joy of creation?

The joy of holding your creation in your hands – have we forgotten that in our relentless pursuit of the ‘right’ answer?

Campus Life

Crashing out: MIT culture or a sign of something deeper?

Has “crashing out” become too normalized at MIT?

Opinion

Where allegations become facts and free speech is selective

Why was my essay on academic freedom and freedom of expression censored while Ian Hutchinson’s defamatory attack was published?

Passing

In current events, signing a compact with the US government to decide who defines MIT would have been passing.

Free speech needs defenders, not gatekeepers

Free speech faces new challenges in all corners of America, and we call on MIT to fight to protect it.

Campus Life

Kip Clark Convos

MIT students are always in motion, but what do we miss when we never pause? A conversation with Kip Clark, known for his “Free Listening” sign, reveals what’s at stake.

Patrick Mang and Katherine Panebianco: dual perspectives on physics at MIT

Not one, but two perspectives on physics at MIT.

11171 comic

The art of the side quest, and why time is ticking by faster