Harvard-Radcliffe Chorus, which consists of faculty, staff, community members, as well as graduate students and undergraduates.
Harvard University Choir, formally established in 1834 but in existence since the eighteenth century, which sings at Sunday services in the Memorial Church.
The Kuumba Singers of Harvard College, the oldest existing Black organization at Harvard College (founded in 1970), celebrates Black creativity and spirituality.
Harvard BlackCAST (Community and Student Theater) is Harvard's theater group dedicated to Black theatrical production and fostering a Black theater community on campus.
Harvard College Asian Student Arts Project (ASAP), Harvard's community and organization dedicated to the theater and arts community for Asian students on campus.
The Harvard-Radcliffe Modern Dance Company.
The Harvard Ballet Company,[6] a student-run organization that performs and choreographs classical ballet, contemporary, and modern dance.
The Harvard Ballroom Team, one of the largest national collegiate ballroom teams.
The Harvard Intertribal Indian Dance Troupe performs Native American powwow dances.
The Harvard Pan-African Dance and Music Ensemble is dedicated to raising awareness of the depth and diversity of African expressive culture through the performance of dance and music from all over the continent.
The Harvard Crimson Dance Team.
Harvard College ¡TEATRO!, a Latino theater group.
Other
HarvardTHUD (The Harvard Undergraduate Drummers), founded in 1999, known for their creative percussion performance with plastic Solo cups, brooms, and traditional instruments.
The Noteables, a non-audition group that performs revue-style musical theater.
Many Harvard undergraduate publications and productions are distributed worldwide.
The Harvard Crimson, the United States' oldest continually published daily college newspaper.
SatireV,[7] the college's satire publication which focuses on bringing satirical Harvard, national, and international news into the public sphere.
Harvard Yearbook Publications, Inc.,[8] publisher of the senior yearbook since 1950.
Her Campus Harvard,[10] an intersectional, feminist publication, targeted at women in college.
The Phillips Brooks House Association, an umbrella community service organization operating in Phillips Brooks House of Harvard Yard, consists of 78 program committees and over 1,800 student volunteers, and serves close to 10,000 clients in the Cambridge and Boston area.
Harvard CityStep provides an arts education through dance, taught by undergraduates, to students in city schools with under-funded arts programs.
The Harvard Undergraduate Council, elected by undergraduates, advocates on behalf of students, operates certain student services, and grants funds to other student organizations.
The Harvard Institute of Politics, a non-partisan living memorial to President John F. Kennedy that promotes public service and provides political opportunities[clarification needed] to undergraduates.
Harvard Undergraduates for Bipartisan Solutions, also known as Harvard Bipartisans, is a center for bipartisan and non-partisan thought, policymaking, and discussion.[17]
Project IMUSE, a non-profit organization run by students at Harvard, Tsinghua, and Peking University that aims to foster mutual curiosity, respect, and understanding between people in China and North America.
The Harvard Undergraduate Foreign Policy Initiative, an undergraduate think tank and a hub for discussing foreign policy and national security.[19]
Harvard College Stem Cell Society, a student group dedicated to raising awareness about the ethics, politics, and science of stem cell research.
Harvard Ethnic Studies Coalition[24] advocates for a robust and interdisciplinary Ethnic Studies program at Harvard.
Task Force on Asian and Pacific American Studies at Harvard College[25] promotes Asian and Pacific American Studies by bringing together students, faculty, staff, and alumni and facilitating multidisciplinary academic discussion and social connection.
Women in Science at Harvard–Radcliffe.
Group for Undergraduate Students in Statistics at Harvard College, a student group dedicated to cultivating passion for statistics, creating a supportive community for undergraduates studying statistics, and providing educational opportunities for students at the College.
Harvard-Radcliffe Society of Physics Students,[26] a collection of dedicated students drawing from backgrounds in physics and closely related fields towards the celebration and discussion of physical topics.
Harvard Applied Math Society,[27] a student group dedicated to promotion of applied mathematics within the undergraduate body, cultivating a supportive community of students interested in the field and exploration of topics within, from academic to professional.
Harvard Undergraduate Linguistics Society (HULS), a student group dedicated to the study of linguistics, which has/is continuously in the process of creating a conlang known as HULSese.
Harvard Undergraduate Consulting on Business and the Environment is a strategy consulting group specializing in technology, sustainability, and life sciences.[28]
Harvard College Consulting Group provides businesses with trained student analysts with term-time consulting projects.[29]
Harvard Undergraduate Data Analytics Group delivers term-time data consulting through skilled student analysts. [30]
Veritas Financial Group helps prepare students for careers in finance.
Harvard Smart Woman Securities.
Harvard Undergraduate Women in Business.
Video Game Development Club.
Harvard AI Safety Team Student Group supports students doing research to mitigate risks from advanced AI.
Harvard Financial Analysts Club[31] uses management of its own investment funds as a teaching vehicle.[32]
Harvard Investment Association educates on investing and financial markets and provides opportunities[clarification needed] for investing experience.
The Leadership Institute at Harvard College provides leadership training.
Harvard College Engineering Society participates in competitions and promotes cross-disciplinary collaboration.[33]
Harvard Undergraduate Robotics Club[34] is a body formed of passionate students dedicated to the promotion and celebration of robotics, regularly participating in a range of annual competitions.
The Chabad House at Harvard is a community center for Jewish students operated by the Orthodox JewishChabad movement. It was founded by Rabbi Hirschy and Mrs. Elkie Zarchi in 1997.[37] According to Professor Ruth Wisse, its success is due to the personality and energy of Rabbi Zarchi.[38] The rabbi and his wife live at the Chabad House with their young children, which contributes to a warm family atmosphere at their Friday evening Shabbat dinners for students.[39] In April 2010 it placed a bid of $6 million to purchase the building of the former DU Club located at 45 Dunster Street from the Fly Club. The bid was reportedly more than twice the tax-assessed value of the building and land.[40]