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Students scavenge through the remains of a piano after MIT's annual Piano Drop tradition at Baker House on April 22, 2024. During the event, bricks are dropped from the roof onto a decommissioned piano. Lee Chen–The Tech
News

Dayglow to headline SpringFest 2025

Wilhem Hector ’25: “SpringFest is a unique tradition that should be a part of everybody's MIT journey.”

News

1,089 admitted students attend Campus Preview Weekend 2025

For 3.14 days on April 17-20, MIT held Campus Preview Weekend.

News

Architectural Uprising names Simmons Hall winner of the 2025 Aesthetic Atrocity Award

On April 10, Architectural Uprising announced that Simmons Hall was the winner of the first annual Aesthetic Atrocity Award for the ugliest building in the U.S.

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Admitted students enjoy a barbecue at Kresge Oval, hosted by Pi Lambda Phi as part of MIT's Campus Preview Weekend 2025. Lee Chen–The Tech
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BREAKING: Three from MIT have visas revoked. Vivian Hir–The Tech
breaking news

BREAKING: Nine with MIT ties have visas revoked

The Tech received a response from a student whose visa was revoked.

News

In memoriam: Karenna Groff ’22 MEng ‘23 and James Santoro ‘23

Karenna Groff ’22 MEng ’23 and James Santoro ’23 passed away in a private plane accident on April 12.

Campus Life

Current students respond to questions from the Class of 2029

The Tech asked students admitted to the MIT Class of 2029 to share questions they had for the Institute's current students. Then, the student body was invited over email to answer.

weather

Variable weather for Campus Preview Weekend

The weather has been pretty variable in temperature and precipitation the last few days, and we see this continue into the weekend.

News

MIT joins lawsuit against funding cuts for Department of Energy

The suit was filed in response to an announcement by the DOE on April 11, which stated that grants would no longer cover indirect costs at prior rates and grants would be cancelled unless they met a blanket 15% percent rate.

News

in-short-v145-n6

Campus Preview Weekend (CPW) starts on Thursday, April 17, and ends on Sunday, April 20. 

puzzles & games

Crossword: Crawl Space

This is a lightly challenging themed puzzle.

News

Physics lecturer Mohamed Abdelhafez to leave MIT at end of the 2024-2025 school year

Mohamed Abdelhafez announced earlier this month that he will leave the Institute at the end of the 2024-25 school year.

News

Cynthia Barnhart reflects upon her role as provost

On Feb. 19, President Sally Kornbluth announced that Provost Cynthia Barnhart SM ’86, PhD ’88 will step down effective July 1 after serving as provost from 2022 to 2025.

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Mohamed Abdelhafez shows his 2022 James Murphy and Irwin Sizer Awards for contributions to community life and improvements to education, respectively. Photo provided by Mohamed Abdelhafez
News

Tens of thousands march during Boston’s installment of national “Hands Off!” protest on April 5

As participants in one of over 1,300 “Hands Off!” rallies, protesters gathered at the Parkman Bandstand in the Boston Common to protest the actions of the second Trump administration.

News

FIRE presents a two-part series about free speech and civil discourse at MIT on April 7

Founded in 1999, the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression (FIRE) is a nonpartisan, nonprofit organization that aims to protect freedom of speech and expression on college campuses.

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Russian political prisoner Andrei Trofimov's handwritten letter to MIT students, page one. PHOTO PROVIDED BY KATE BROWN
Opinion

A letter to MIT students from Putin’s dungeons

Professor Kate Brown shares a letter to the MIT community from a political prisoner in Russia.

Opinion

From Moscow to Massachusetts: the chilling echoes of autocracy

Trump’s detention of international students for their dissenting opinions is shockingly familiar. In Russia, student arrests were a telltale sign of rising authoritarianism — one that ultimately led to war.

Opinion

MIT must stand up to McCarthyism

MIT is not just a silent bystander to the new Red Scare. It is guilty. The road to the prison colony and detention camp was paved in leafy Cambridge. But it is not too late for us to participate in an organized struggle for justice.

movie review

Black Bag: A short thriller that underwhelms despite Soderbergh’s big-name leads

Coming in at 94 minutes, Black Bag’s tight runtime prevents the plot from getting too deep, but also makes for a snappy thriller perfect for a weeknight watch. Just don't expect a payoff like Ocean's Eleven.

movie review

Soundtrack to a Coup d’Etat: Uneven narratives of 20th century geopolitics set to astonishingly good jazz

Johan Grimonprez's efforts to comb through mountains of historic footage, first-person accounts, and jazz pieces were no doubt heroic. If only his findings were crafted into a tighter, clearer narrative.

News

Housing and Residential Services announces roof access restrictions for Random, Simmons

HRS intended to restrict entrance to Random Hall’s roofdeck between midnight and 6 am by installing tap scanners over spring break, and to install tap scanners on Simmons’s terraces.

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Professor Linda Griffith, Director of the Center for Gynepathology Research at MIT, explains MIT's launch of a moonshot for menstruation science. Photo provided by Jake Belcher
Science

Menstruation science moonshot: MIT’s bold quest to revolutionize women’s health

Linda Griffith: “We want to create an international movement that helps us bring a lot of great science and engineering into the study of menstruation.”

News

Requests for UROP direct funding exceed available budget by over $1.4 million for Spring 2025

According to Michael Bergren, Associate Dean and Director of UROP, the UROP Office budgeted $2 million for the spring while receiving around $3.4 million in direct funding requests.

News

Broad Institute leadership foresees reductions in non-personnel costs, facilities expenses, and salary in response to funding cuts and federal changes

On March 25, the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard held a community update meeting regarding the potential impact of funding cuts on the Institute’s budget, as well as the ramifications of recent executive orders on the Broad community.

Sports

Spring Varsity Sports Review

Before May approaches, check out how our varsity athletes have been faring as the weather warms up.

Sports

MIT Club Frisbee: Grim Beavers and Munchers Compete at Sectionals

Over the weekend, both MIT Men’s Club Frisbee teams competed in their respective conference tournaments for the 2024-2025 season.

Opinion

Cachet in a time of crisis

Elon Musk’s DOGE is carrying out an unprecedented attack on essential federal funding and services. What can MIT affiliates do about it?

Battlecode at 25: how a whimsical idea became an enduring MIT love story

Here’s how Battlecode began 25 years ago — and why the secret to its endurance is the quiet love that the global community of nerds have for each other.

NOTICE: Lifting Suspension on Opinion Policy

The Tech Editorial Board is lifting the temporary suspension on the Opinion section, and we are accepting submissions, effective immediately.

Campus Life

Making New Connections

Finding the “friends” in “friends-to-lovers”

eleven

life lesson: if you have to convince yourself that you’re not in love with someone, you’re probably in love with them.

Things that changed my brain chemistry this IAP

Life at MIT — more like London