Writer
Jonathan N. Axelrod
Latest Content
How Sports Stars Are Found
As a high school quarterback in Las Vegas, Jay A. Snowden '98 was recruited by coaches from the University of
Building Crimson Athletic Hopes
Head Coach of Football Timothy L. Murphy's arrival at Harvard in December 1993 was widely heralded as the dawn of
Razing of Carey Cage Imminent
After nearly 100 years of housing Harvard athletics programs, Carey Cage is slated for demolition in the next few weeks.
Rudenstine Urges Students to Lobby
In the wake of Tuesday's rally for student aid in Boston, President Neil L. Rudenstine urged students yesterday to lobby
University of California at Berkeley: A Retirement Plan Gone Awry
Few schools have successfully developed retirement plans on which Harvard might use as a blueprint from which to plan its
Schools Consider Faculty Aging
Few jobs promise a lifetime term: a seat on the Supreme Court, the papal office and membership on the Harvard
B-School Dean Begins Changes
After only two weeks on the job, new Dean of the Business School Kim B. Clark '74 has already started
Arafat to Speak at Kennedy School
Yasser Arafat, president of the Palestinian National Authority [PNA], is scheduled to speak at the Kennedy School of Government next
THE EDUCATION OF JAMIE HOUGHTON
AS MEMBERS OF THE UNIVERISTY'S HIGHEST governing board filed into the Loeb House Cabot Room for their first meeting of
Rudenstine's Salary Is Average For Presidents
Harvard may be number one in the academic polls, but when it comes to university presidents' salaries, President Neil L.
Ig Nobel Tickets Go on Sale
Tickets for the "Fifth First Annual Ig Nobel Prize Ceremony," a spoof of the Nobel Prize Awards, go on sale
Bio 10 Canceled for Medical Reasons
Students arriving at Biology 10 on Monday expecting to learn about invertebrate biology were met at the door by Professor
Endowment's Growth Rising But Middling
Showing average performance, the University's endowment returned 16.8 percent for the fiscal year 1995 and rose to more than $7
President Continues To Focus On D.C.
At the start of a new academic year in Cambridge, President Nell L. Rudenstine continues to focus much of his
Balancing Sports and Scholarship
I f you visit almost any collegiate campus on an autumn Sunday afternoon, the sights and sounds are strikingly similar.