Word: rudenstein
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Photographer Lyle Ashton Harris discussed his exploration of self through art in a lecture at the Sackler Museum yesterday. Harris, an artist and professor at NYU, opened his exhibition “Sketches from the Shore” at the Rudenstein Gallery in the W.E.B. Du Bois Center. The collection, his most recent body of work, consists of 13 photographs and a collage taken in Ghana over the past few years. His subject is the complexity of modern African culture, which he expresses through his images, as in one photograph of people in tradition dress talking on cell phones. Harris...
...from Cambridge University in the philosophy of science, and an M.D. from Harvard Medical School, Hyman was appointed in 1994 to lead the University’s newly created Mind, Brain, and Behavior program, one of the five inter-faculty initiatives started by then-University President Neil L. Rudenstein. When Hyman returned to Harvard in 2001 to serve as chief academic officer, appointed by then-University President Lawrence H. Summers, he set out to transform the provostship into a driving force for interdisciplinary reform. Taking office “with an understanding that the job was going to change...
...responsibility of five Corporation members along with one or two members from the Board of Overseers,” says Charles P. Slichter ’45, who served as a member of the Harvard Corporation and participated in the searches that tapped Derek C. Bok and Neil L. Rudenstein.“It’s important to have these overseers partake in the search because the final consent must come from the Board,” he says.However, the search committee doesn’t make its decision in a vacuum. According to a Garrett T. Graff...
...Clayton Spencer, a veteran Massachussetts Hall staffer from the days of Neil L. Rudenstein, has been promoted to vice president for policy, where she will assume broad oversight of Summers’ administration in a position that has never previously existed...
Last academic year, 12.5 percent of FAS tenure offers, or four out of 32, went to female professors—a drop from 36 percent in 2000-2001, the last year that Neil L. Rudenstein served as University President—and only one of the 22 newly tenured faculty in the 2003-2004 year was female...