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...There is no connection" between Harvard's investment in Convexity Capital Management and the arrival of the University's new endowment manager, according to Harvard spokesman John Longbrake. The print and original online versions of the Feb. 7 news article, "Ex-HMC Chief Opens $6B Fund," incorrectly reported that Harvard would wait until the arrival of endowment manager Mohamed A. El-Erian in mid-February before it commits money to Convexity. According to Longbrake, "the commitment is made" to invest $500 million in Convexity, which is led by El-Erian's predecessor, Jack R. Meyer...
...twitches. Frustrated by his slow progress at Brooke, he started to run in secret with his new prosthesis. When his therapists insisted he work out in a pool instead, he got revenge. He showed up in shorts and ripped them off Chippendale-stripper style to reveal a camouflage-print Speedo that drew "ewwws" from the witnesses, he says with a chuckle...
...their cell phones in the checkout line but also the clerks who work only for the employee discount and the managers obsessed with the employee dress code. "People aren't even aware of their own behavior," Feuti says. "Maybe they'll finally realize if they see it in print...
...print and original online versions of the Feb. 3 news article, "Job Offers Up for Young Historians," incorrectly stated that the director of graduate studies for Harvard's history department is James T. Kloppenberg. In fact, that post is held by Hue-Tam Ho Tai, who is also the Young professor of Sino-Vietnamese history. Kloppenberg is the chair of the department's graduate admissions committee...
...development has been positive, but it is not without its flaws. Students who change their schedules during shopping week are vexed by the need to obtain an entirely new set of signatures from their professors, inconveniencing both students and professors, and making schedule modifications unnecessarily complicated. Switching from print to electronic signatures would remedy this problem. Rather than requiring professors and advisers to physically sign paper copies of students’ electronic study cards, the Office of the Registrar could instead allow professors to electronically approve students’ enrollment requests, and could enable advisors to approve of a virtual...