STANLEY S. SURREY, Smith Professor of Law, chairman. Surrey is an expert on tax law and a proponent of tax reform and served as Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for tax policy from 1961 to 1969.
"The Gulf Oil stock decision seems to say that we will not sell our stock," he said, "but at the same time, having made that decision, we have to be socially responsible, to support disclosure resolutions and the like--when the corporation hasn't made previous disclosures, when it's not just a lot of unnecessary work."
Faculty:
M. COLYER CRUM, Williston Professor of Investment Management (Business School). "An institutional investment manager or endowment manager who chooses not to get involved at this point in time is going to have a tough row to hoe," Crum told an economic conference three years ago. "I don't think the students are going to let him off the hook...increasingly you are going to have to vote against the managers."
ROBERT DORFMAN, Wells Professor of Political Economy. Dorfman has written on linear programming and the economic status of the aged.
MATTHEW S. MESELSON, professor of Biology. Meselson's testimony before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in 1969 helped bring about President Nixon's decision that year to end the stockpiling of chemical and biological weapons. Meselson later warned Senate committees that American use of tear gas in Vietnam contributed to the breakdown of taboos against employing such weapons.
DR. ALONZO S. YERBY, professor of Health Services Administration (Faculty of Public Health). Yerby has served as New York City's Commissioner of Health.
Alumni:
ABRAM T. COLLIER '34. Collier also attended the Law School and the Business School. A lawyer, he is the president of New England Mutual Life Insurance in Boston.
G. JEROME W. GOODMAN '52. Goodman is also known as 'Adam Smith,' and is the author of The Money Game and the currently best-selling Supermoney. In his original incarnation, he wrote several screenplays including The Americanization of Emily.
W. RUSSELL PEABODY '39. Peabody also attended the Business School. He works for Scudder Stevens and Clark in Boston.
SUSAN R. SHAPIRO. The Law School awarded Shapiro her LLB in 1965. Shapiro works for Choate, Hall and Steward in Boston.
W. NICHOLAS THORNDIKE '55. Thorndike is chairman of the Wellington Management Company in Boston.
Students:
MARTIN J. AUERBACH '73 Auerbach lives in Adams House.
JEFFREY L. BALASH. As an undergraduate, Balash served on Princeton's advisory committee on shareholder responsibility. Balsh is class of '74 at the Business School.
DAVID R. CALKINS. Calkins is not related to Hugh Calkins '45, fellow of Harvard College. He is class of '74 at the Medical School.
REBECCA A. DONELLAN. As an undergraduate, Conellan served on MIT's advisory committee on shareholder responsibility. She is now at the Law School.
JOHN J. HOGAN '73. Hogan lives in Jamaica Plain.
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