Harvard Rules

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Harvard Rules Page 48

by Richard Bradley

Harvard and Summers in

  of Neil Rudenstein

  presidential power and

  of Summers at Treasury Department

  of Summers’s dispute with Cornel West

  Memorial Church

  Menand, Louis

  Mendelsohn, Everett

  men’s clubs, Harvard

  mental health issues

  Mexican financial crisis

  Meyssan, Thierry

  military recruitment issue

  Mitchell, Robert

  money, Harvard and, See also endowment;

  fundraising

  Moore, John

  morality, economics and

  moral relativism

  Morgan, Marcyliena

  Morison, Samuel Eliot

  Morning Prayers talks

  Morris, Dick

  Morris Gray Lecture

  Morrison, Toni

  movies, Harvard in

  murder-suicide event

  Muslim students

  naked student ritual

  National Science Foundation

  New, Lisa (Elisa)

  New Republic, The

  New York Times

  1960s influence on Harvard

  Nobel Prizes

  O’Brien, Patricia

  office hours

  Ogletree, Charles

  Oldenburg, Richard

  O’Mary, Michael

  O’Neill, Jackie

  Overseers. See Board of Overseers

  Page, Shaun

  Palmer, Brian

  Paretzky, Johanna

  patriotism, Summers’s

  Paulin, Thomas Neilson

  peace rally

  Pearson, Carl

  Peretz, Martin

  Perry, Victoria. See Summers, Victoria Perry

  personal sacrifices, Summers’s

  Pinker, Steven

  Plunkett, David Jonathan

  politics

  Harvard and

  identity

  Summers and, (see also leadership style, Summers’s)

  Summers on Harvard and

  tenure, academic freedom, and

  Cornel West and

  policy memo scandal

  popular culture, Harvard in

  popularity, Summers’s

  Posner, Richard

  Powell, Colin

  Powell, Colleen Richards

  Powell, Lewis F.

  power, Summers’s, See also leadership style, Summers’s

  presidential search, Harvard’s

  Board of Overseers, Harvard Corporation, and

  interview and selection of Summers

  interview of Lee Bollinger and secrecy issue

  search committee and selection of candidates

  student protest and

  presidents, Harvard. See Bok, Derek; presidential search, Harvard’s; Pusey, Nathan Marsh; Rudenstine Neil; Summers, Lawrence Henry

  curricular review and

  installation of

  powers of

  success of

  presidents, university

  presidents, United States

  President’s Chair

  press. See media coverage

  Primal Scream ritual

  Princeton University

  Pritchett, Lant

  professors. See faculty

  Progressive Student Labor Movement

  protest literature class, See also dissent, Summers and; student protest

  provost appointment

  publications, Harvard

  Pusey, Nathan Marsh

  questioners, Summers and

  Quigley, Ellen

  race, See also affirmative action; African Americans; anti-Semitism; Jewish ethnicity

  Radcliff College

  Raff, Daniel M. G.

  Rakoczy, Kate L.

  rape

  Rawls, John

  Red Book

  Reich, Robert

  Reischauer, Robert

  relationships, romantic. See romantic relationships, Summers’s

  Republicans

  research grants

  Rice, Condoleezza

  Richardson, H. H.

  Rimer, Sara

  rituals, Harvard

  Robinson, Mary

  romantic relationships, Summers’s

  Laura Ingraham

  Lisa New

  Victoria Perry Summers

  Roosevelt, Franklin

  Rosovsky, Henry

  ROTC issue

  Roth, William

  Rothenberg, James

  Rowe, Peter

  Rubin, Robert

  Rudenstein, Neil

  Allston and

  breakdown of

  disappointment with

  early career of

  fundraising of

  Skip Gates and

  leadership style of

  resignation of

  student protest and

  Summers vs.

  Cornel West and

  Russell, J. Hale

  Sacks, Peter

  Safdie, Moshe

  Samuelson, Couper

  Samuelson, Frank

  Samuelson, Paul

  Sandel, Michael

  Scadden, David

  scandal, World Bank memo

  Schneider, Carol Geary

  scholarship, Summers’s

  School of Public Health and School of Education

  sciences

  curricular review and

  general education vs.

  presidential search and

  Summers and

  search. See presidential search, Harvard’s

  secrecy

  Harry Lewis departure and

  Harvard Corporation and

  presidential search committee and

  Summers’s

  Senior English Address

  September 11 terrorist attacks

  Sever Hall

  sex

  sexual assault

  sexual harassment comment

  Sharpton, Al

  Shinagel, Michael

  sleeping, Summers’s

  Smith, Marian

  Society of Fellows

  Solomon Amendment, Harvard and

  specialization, curriculum

  speeches. See also Morning Prayers talks

  cancellation of Tom Paulin’s

  style of Summers vs. Rudenstine

  Zayed Yasin

  Spencer, Clayton

  Sperry, Willard

  Stanford University

  statue, John Harvard

  Stauffer, John

  Steele, Shelby

  Steinberg, Jacques

  Stem Cell Institute

  Stiglitz, Joseph

  Stone, Alan

  Stone, Robert G., Jr.

  student protest See also dissent Summers and

  Derek Bok and

  living wage campaign

  peace rally

  Nathan Pusey and

  Summers and

  students. See also student protest

  African American

  curricular review and

  foreign

  grade inflation issue

  Harvard culture and

  Jewish

  Muslim

  Summers and questions by

  Cornel West’s departure and

  study abroad

  style. See leadership; leadership style Summers’s; manners, Summers’s

  Subrahmanian, Krishnan

  suicide, Marian Smith’s

  Summers, Lawrence Henry. See also Harvard University

  cancer of

  at commencement in 2004

  conflict with Cornel West (see African and African American Studies (Afro-American Studies); West Cornel)

  dissent and (see dissent, Summers and)

  family of

  Harvard’s presidential search for (see presidential search, Harvard’s)

  as Harvard student and professor

  installation of, as Harvard president

 
Jewish ethnicity of

  leadership style of (see leadership style Summers’s)

  at MIT

  Neil Rudenstine vs., (see also Rudenstine, Neil)

  media coverage and (see media coverage)

  romantic relationships (see romantic relationships, Summers’s)

  student protest and

  at Treasury Department

  at World Bank

  Summers, Robert and Anita

  Summers, Ruth, Pamela, and Harry

  Summers, Victoria Perry

  sweatshop issue

  table manners, Summers’s

  Tadesse, Sinedu

  Talbott, Strobe

  Tanenhaus, Sam

  tax cuts issue

  teaching fellows

  temper, Summers’s

  tennis, Summers and

  tenure

  academic freedom issue and

  Skip Gates and

  presidential power and

  Summers and Harvard

  Summers and law school

  women and

  Tercentenary Theatre

  terrorism

  Thailand financial panic

  Thomas, Richard

  tradition, Summers and

  Transition journal

  Traub, James

  Treasury Department, Summers at

  Tribe, Laurence

  tuition

  Undergraduate Council

  undergraduate education. See Harvard College

  Undergraduate English Oration

  United Arab Emirates

  United States presidents

  University Hall

  university marshall

  University of Michigan

  University Professor position

  Vendler, Helen

  Washington Consensus

  Washington style. See leadership style Summers’s

  Wealth, See also endowment; fundraising; money

  weight, Summers’s

  Welch, Jack

  West, Cornel

  Afro-American Studies and reputation of

  at Archie Epps’s funeral

  departure of

  hiring of

  Timothy McCarthy and

  Summers, globalization, and

  tenure, academic freedom, and

  Wetlaufer, Suzanne

  Widener Memorial Library

  Wieseltier, Leon

  Will, George

  William and Flora Hewlett Foundation

  Willie, Charles

  Wilson, James Q.

  Wilson, William Julius

  Winokur, Herbert “Pug,”

  Wisse, Ruth

  Wolcowitz, Jeffrey

  Wolfensohn, James

  women. See also romantic relationships Summers’s

  final clubs and

  Harvard and

  Harvard Corporation and

  presidential search and

  Radcliff College and

  Summers’s staff and

  workers, Harvard

  World Bank

  world university, Harvard as

  Wrinn, Joe

  Yale-style housing system

  Yale University

  Yasin, Zayed

  Yauch, Adam

  Zayed, Sheik

  Zedillo, Ernesto

  Zemin, Jiang

  Ziemes, George

  Photo Insert

  Harvard Law School dean Derek Bok became president in 1971 and inherited an angry and divided campus.

  (© Corbis/Bennett)

  Twenty-year-old Lawrence Summers in his 1975 yearbook photo from MIT, where he was captain of the debate team.

  (Courtesy of the Technique)

  As Harvard president from 1991 to 2001, Neil Rudenstine raised $2.6 billion but was criticized for devoting too much time to fundraising.

  (Nicola Kountoupes/Cornell University Photography)

  Henry Louis Gates Jr. and Cornel West were part of Rudenstine’s “dream team” of African American scholars but were resented by some members of the Harvard faculty.

  (Republished with permission of Globe Newspaper Company, Inc.)

  Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers in front of dollar bills bearing his signature. At Harvard, Summers would autograph bills for eager students.

  (AP Photo/Dennis Cook)

  “A new kind of geopolitician”: Summers in the White House briefing room with Clinton economic advisers Gene Sperling (center) and Jack Lew in July 1999.

  (AP Photo/Doug Mills)

  Now president of Columbia University, Lee Bollinger was said to be the faculty’s favorite to be Harvard’s twenty-seventh president.

  (Courtesy of Columbia University)

  “I accept!” Lawrence Summers at a March 11, 2001, press conference at Harvard’s Loeb House to announce his selection as president.

  (AP Photo/Lawrence Jackson)

  Lawrence Summers with U2 singer Bono at a Harvard dinner in June 2001. The two men had met to discuss the issue of international debt relief while Summers was at the Treasury Department.

  (Lesley Unruh)

  Cornel West with freshmen at Princeton University in the fall of 2002. After leaving Harvard due to an altercation with Summers, West taught a Princeton seminar called “The Tragic, the Comic, and the Political.”

  (Courtesy of Cornel West)

  Harry Lewis, the dean of Harvard College until March 2003, clashed with Summers over the college’s direction—and lost.

  (Justin Haan/Harvard Crimson)

  Memorial Church pastor Peter Gomes, here speaking at the Boston State House in February 2004, worried that Harvard’s new president didn’t appreciate the importance of spiritual life on campus.

  (Brian M. Haas/Harvard)

  Faculty of Arts and Sciences dean Bill Kirby, here in his University Hall office, was charged with leading Harvard’s curricular review, but some wondered if Summers wasn’t really calling the shots.

  (Brian M. Haas/Harvard)

  Mathematician Benedict Gross replaced Harry Lewis as dean of Harvard College in a spring 2003 shake-up and soon reported feeling “overwhelmed.”

  (David E. Stein/Harvard)

  Timothy Patrick McCarthy, co-teacher of “American Protest Literature, from Tom Paine to Tupac,” speaking at a rally against the war in Iraq on March 20, 2003.

  (Courtesy of Timothy Patrick McCarthy)

  William Kirby, Lawrence Summers, and Benedict Gross sing “Fair Harvard” at the freshman opening exercises in September 2003.

  (David E. Stein/Harvard Crimson)

  Lecturer Brian Palmer, shown here teaching in the spring of 2004, thought that Summers was making Harvard more competitive and materialistic.

  (Courtesy of Brian Palmer)

  Lawrence Summers celebrating his third commencement as president of Harvard on June 10, 2004.

  (AP Photos)

  About the Author

  The former executive editor of George magazine, RICHARD BRADLEY is the author of the number one New York Times bestseller American Son: A Portrait of John F. Kennedy, Jr. His writing has appeared in the New York Times, Vanity Fair, Rolling Stone, and the New Republic. A graduate of Yale College who received his A.M. in American history from Harvard, Bradley lives in New York City.

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  ALSO BY RICHARD BRADLEY

  American Son: A Portrait of John F. Kennedy, Jr.

  Credits

  JACKET PHOTOGRAPH © Phil Schermeister/CORBIS

  Copyright

  HARVARD RULES. Copyright © 2005 by Richard Bradley. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, down-loaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form o
r by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.

  ePub edition February 2005 ISBN 9780061744921

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available upon request.

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