Academia is not foreign ground for Daniel, however. He is the former president of the board of trustees at Wesleyan University, his alma mater.
James R. Houghton, a member of the Corporation since 1996, is the chair emeritus of Corning, Inc. Most recently he has filled his time as the chair of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Houghton has a storied family history--his cousin built Houghton Library, located next to Lamont, and his great-great-grandfather manufactured the first light bulb for Thomas A. Edison.
Houghton is well-known on his own merits as well. An expert fundraiser, Houghton left Corning in 1996 to turn his energy to education and the arts.
Herbert S. Winokur Jr. '64-'65 is the youngest member of the search committee--the only one under 60. He received all three of his academic degrees from Harvard and continues to have close ties with the financial and academic sides of the University.
He sits on the board of the Harvard Management Company and is the former co-chair of reunion fundraising for the Class of 1965.
Winokur is the former co-chair of the New York Historical Society, an honorary director of the University of California at Los Angeles Medical Center and former chair and CEO of Capricorn Holdings.
Read more in News
Campus Crime TimelineRecommended Articles
-
The Changing Face of the Harvard CorporationIt was the kind of vote that's usually just a formality. But this time, the University made history. Over a
-
Students, Faculty Left Out of ProcessThe men and women who hold Harvard's future in their hands will be under continuous scrutiny over the coming months
-
The search committee rank and fileThe Academics Sharon E. Gagnon, president of the Board of Overseers, will have a long commute for committee meetings. A
-
The Boys of SummersThe temperature outside was barely above freezing, but Lawrence H. Summers was walking eagerly, almost rhapsodically, into Loeb House just
-
Saying He No Longer Supports Summers, Harper Quits BoardConrad K. Harper announced his resignation from the Harvard Corporation today, saying he could “no longer support President Summers.” Harper,
-
Summers Critic Resigns From CorporationConrad K. Harper said yesterday he “could no longer support” University President Lawrence H. Summers and abruptly resigned from the