• Faust's letter followed Harvard's announcement of planned across-the-board budget cuts of 10% to 15% in all Harvard's departments and a 3.5% tuition increase for the 2009-2010 academic year.

    FORBES: Magazine Article

  • In an open letter to Harvard's Faculty of Arts and Sciences, the university said it searched the email after two leaks from Harvard's Administrative Board, which was overseeing the cheating probe, led to concerns that student information was at risk.

    WSJ: Harvard Explains Secret Email Search

  • That's a nice way of saying that during recent years the Harvard Management Company, the university's investment subsidiary, diverted large portions of the university's endowment assets out of safe but poky low-yield securities (as of last June fixed-income investments accounted for only 16% of Harvard's portfolio) and into what this Forbes story describes as "exotic financial instruments": derivatives, hedge funds, private equity partnerships, commodities and emerging-market equities.

    FORBES: How Harvard Should Handle Its Endowment

  • Woodruff was 38 when he received the Talladega commission. (Born in 1900 in Ohio, and raised in Tennessee, he died in 1980 in New York, where he taught at New York University for more than 20 years.) After studying at the John Herron Art Institute, Indianapolis, Woodruff broadened his experience at the Art Institute of Chicago's school, Harvard's Fogg Museum School, and in Paris between 1927 and 1931.

    WSJ: Rising Up: Hale Woodruff's Murals From Talladega College | High Museum of Art | From Mutiny to Harmony | By Karen Wilkin

  • It required the Friends of Harvard Basketball, an alumni group dominated by ex-players. chipping in money to improve Amaker's salary, with, The Harvard Crimson reported, the full knowledge of Harvard's athletic director.

    CNN: An easy out for athletes in Harvard scandal?

  • She's also a visiting fellow at Harvard's WEB DuBois Institute, and Dr. Clay Carson is an editor of the papers of Martin Luther King Jr, and the Director of the King Institute at Stanford University.

    NPR: The Significance of MLK's Personal Papers

  • Facebook also claimed that none of the emails in Mr. Ceglia's complaint showed in its search of Harvard's servers.

    WSJ: Facebook Unearths 200 Emails in Motion to Dismiss Ceglia's Suit

  • What's particularly intriguing to doctors such as Harvard's Chris Cannon is that this means the drug does more than just help patients lose weight.

    FORBES: Lose Weight, Quit Smoking With One Pill

  • Whether this is a proper focus for business education is being openly challenged by thought leaders such as Harvard's Clayton Christensen, whose books on innovation include The Innovator's Dilemma, and Rakesh Khurana, also of Harvard, author of From Higher Aims to Hired Hands: The Social Transformation of American Business Schools and the Unfulfilled Promise of Management as a Profession.

    FORBES: Leadership

  • "It's one of the best values in health care, " says Harvard's Cannon.

    FORBES: OutFront

  • In recent weeks, faculty at Duke and Amherst have voted against elements of expanding MOOCs on their campuses, and 58 Harvard faculty last week called for a new university committee to consider ethical issues related to Harvard's participation in edX, a MOOC-producing consortium led by Harvard and MIT.

    WSJ: Higher ed systems in 10 states turn to Coursera

  • The drug's inventor, Randall Lauffer, quit a job as a chemist at Harvard's Massachusetts General Hospital to develop his idea for the drug.

    FORBES: Light It Up

  • Adding to the risk (and also to the prospect of rich payoffs, or so Harvard's money managers hoped) was the fact that, thanks to its use of complex derivatives, Harvard had actually "overinvested" in risk investments to the tune of 105%, as Forbes puts it.

    FORBES: Magazine Article

  • Leith Sharp, director of the school's "Green Campus Initiative, " says the secret to its success is a business model that encourages Harvard's departments and schools to turn their environmental projects into financial savings.

    FORBES: Magazine Article

  • The study's statistician, Harvard University's Robert Glynn, estimates that about 250, 000 heart attacks, strokes, hospitalizations and cardiac deaths could be prevented over five years if people with good cholesterol and high hs-CRP levels were taking statins.

    CNN: Study: Cholesterol drugs could help those with healthy levels

  • Barbara Kellerman is research director of the Center for Public Leadership at Harvard's John F.

    FORBES: Magazine Article

  • America has college museums (Harvard's and Yale's, especially) with encyclopedic riches that equal the world's greatest.

    WSJ: Fifty Has Seldom Looked So Good Bared | The Naked Museum | Sheldon Museum of Art | By Willard Spiegelman

  • The team from Harvard's Wyss Institute have published their results in the journal Nature Materials.

    BBC: New material can halt runny liquids on demand

  • Time off: A confirmed environmentalist, Otto, 55, also supports medical research and Harvard's Busch-Reisinger Museum.

    FORBES: Europe

  • Harvard's Antman says he's hopeful that under an Obama administration, those types of studies might happen.

    FORBES: AHA Meeting

  • Ezekowitz also publishes a "survival analysis" method that put Harvard's win probability Thursday at 21.4%.

    WSJ: NCAA Tournament: Harvard Outsmarts Harvard

  • News of the secret search drew immediate criticism from some members of Harvard's faculty.

    CNN: Harvard apologizes after secret e-mail search

  • Wharton, which received 6, 200 applications last year (second to Harvard's 6, 700), is no stranger to globalism.

    FORBES: Case Study: Global Degrees

  • Such personalised medicine means huge sales forces are no longer necessary, says Harvard's Ms Herzinger.

    ECONOMIST: Pharmaceuticals

  • Defenders of Harvard's portfolio argue the secondary market is discounting private equity stakes too much.

    FORBES: Magazine Article

  • For a long while, Harvard's daring investment style was the envy of the endowment world.

    FORBES: Magazine Article

  • Private equity stakes like Harvard's are selling at 40% to 60% discounts in various markets.

    FORBES: Magazine Article

  • But one clue to what may be coming can be found in Harvard's own portfolio.

    FORBES: Magazine Article

  • Nonetheless, is "worst economic crisis since the Great Depression" an accurate way to characterize Harvard's current plight?

    FORBES: Magazine Article

  • Harvard's policies, like those of an increasing number of employers, allow it to monitor official workplace email.

    WSJ: Harvard Explains Secret Email Search

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