At the Internet & Society 2000 conference, Clark delivered an opening address in which he spoke about his views on technology.
"I believe that one of the biggest effects of the Internet era will be the creations of new kinds of institutions that will allow us to pursue [higher education]," Clark said the remarks.
Such remarks are in keeping with Clark's reputation for taking business risks--and could make for an interesting University approach to technology should he become president.
Clark also spoke about the value of private gain versus social gain--not something one might expect from a businessperson, he noted.
He became the business school's eighth dean in fall of 1995. Shortly after his appointment, he brought e-mail to HBS for the first time.
He was said to have beaten out 50 others--including some from outside Harvard--for the spot. At the beginning of his tenure, the school had just switched from a semester system to a year-round structure and was changing its M.B.A. program.
Now snowy-haired and a shade under six feet, he is not unlike Fineberg in his manner of speaking. He comes across as deliberately conversational, smooth and well paced. He gestures widely. A sense of humor is apparent. He is polished and expressive.
Read more in News
Ecuadorean IOP Fellow Accused of CorruptionRecommended Articles
-
Bloom Named Dean of School Of Public HealthResearcher and health policy expert Barry R. Bloom was named the next dean of the School of Public Health, President
-
Living Wage Campaign Meets ProvostNearly two months after the Living Wage Campaign demanded to meet with the Harvard's president or provost, they got their
-
Miller's On-Line Courses Spark Review of PolicyProminent Harvard Law School Professor Arthur R. Miller's taped lectures for an on-line university may run afoul of University rules
-
Corporation Prepares To Begin Nationwide Search for SuccessorWhile President Neil L. Rudenstine's decision to step down means a chance to relax for the notoriously hard-working president, the
-
Behind the Scenes, A Sprawling Bureaucracy Runs the Many Parts of the Nation's Oldest UniversityIt is the rare undergraduate who truly cares about the powers that run this colossus of higher education. Stiff-necked bureaucratic
-
Fineberg To Resign as ProvostHarvey V. Fineberg '67 is the third provost in University history, and he may very well be the last. After