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...University to give a spot on the presidential search committee to a graduate student. In a letter sent on Thursday, the student leaders asked the University to skirt tradition and include graduate representation on the nine-member search committee, which currently includes only the six members of the Harvard Corporation??€”the University’s top governing body—and three representatives from the less powerful Board of Overseers. The University has said a student advisory committee will offer advice in the search, but Graduate Council President John W. Kalis, a second-year student at the Divinity...
...nine-person presidential search committee unveiled Thursday. The committee comprises the six members of the Harvard Corporation-the University’s highest governing board—as well as an art historian, a computer scientist, and a trial lawyer, all three of whom serve on the Corporation??€™s sister body, the Board of Overseers...
There are still no students or Harvard faculty members on the nine-person presidential search committee unveiled yesterday. The committee comprises the six members of the Harvard Corporation??€”the University’s highest governing board—as well as an art historian, a computer scientist, and a trial lawyer, all three of whom serve on the Corporation??€™s sister body, the Board of Overseers...
...critics who say that University governance is too secretive. Corporation members spoke with several department chairs and other Faculty of Arts and Sciences members in the run-up to Summers’ resignation. But some professors at the University’s professional schools had complained that the Corporation??€”the only body with the authority to fire and hire a president—failed to reach out to the broader Harvard community in considering Summers’ fate...
...Harvard Corporation, the University’s highest governing board, directed the school’s endowment managers yesterday to sell the Sinopec shares after the Corporation??€™s Committee on Shareholder Responsibility—which comprises Robert D. Reischauer ’63, an economist, and James R. Houghton ’58, the chairman of the glass and fiber-optic company Corning—recommended divestment. In a statement yesterday, the Committee on Shareholder Responsibility said that Sinopec is a partner in a venture that will significantly increase oil production in southeastern Sudan in the coming months...