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Daily Archive for Sunday, April 16th, 2006

Fair Harvard – She Leads

Date: Sun, 16 Apr 2006
To: psearch@harvard.edu
From: Charles Nesson
Subject: Re: Request for Advice

dear members of the HARVARD UNIVERSITY PRESIDENTIAL SEARCH COMMITTEE
:
i advise you to choose elena kagan. she will cement a continuous strand of leadership and carry forward her own. she will work with derek smooth as silk. she is stong. she gives confidence and care. with her we will be fine and proud and open to our future.

charles nesson
weld professor of law
founder and faculty co-director of the berkman center

At 02:35 PM 4/13/2006, you wrote:
HARVARD UNIVERSITY PRESIDENTIAL SEARCH COMMITTEE
James R. Houghton, Chairman
Frances D. Fergusson, Susan L. Graham, Nannerl O. Keohane, Patricia A. King,
William F. Lee, Robert D. Reischauer, James F. Rothenberg, Robert E. Rubin

April 2006

Dear Members of the Harvard Community,

On behalf of Harvard’s governing boards, I write to invite your advice on the search for a new president of Harvard, in light of Larry Summers’ decision to conclude his tenure as our 27th president at the end of the 2005-06 academic year. We are grateful to President Summers for the vision and energy he has brought to the leadership of the University, and to Derek Bok for his willingness to serve as interim president from July 1 until a new president has taken office. As we embark on the search for a new leader for Harvard, we would value your observations on the major opportunities and challenges facing Harvard in the years ahead and the priorities that a new president should have most in mind in guiding the University. We would also appreciate having your views on the personal and professional qualities most important to seek in a new president, as well as your thoughts on any individuals you believe are deserving of serious consideration. We will, of course, be seeking a person of high intellectual distinction, with proven qualities of leadership, a devotion to excellence in education and research, a capacity to guide a complex institution through a time of significant change, and a dedication to the ideals and values central to a community of learning.

Through this time of transition, it is important that the University sustain momentum in advancing a range of continuing institutional priorities. We are renewing and enhancing the learning experience of our students, especially in the College and also across the schools. We are growing the faculty to build strength in fields of rising academic significance. We are forging new links among Harvard’s faculties – to foster innovation in the sciences, international studies, and other vital endeavors across the disciplines and professions. We are opening Harvard’s doors wider to outstanding students of limited financial means. We are planning carefully and imaginatively for the historic extension of Harvard’s campus into Allston. In these crucial efforts and others, the University’s continuing progress will depend on the energy, creativity, and goodwill of all of us who care about Harvard.

Under the University’s charter, it is the responsibility of the Harvard Corporation to elect a new president, with the counsel and consent of the Board of Overseers. Consistent with past practice, the search committee will comprise the six members of the Corporation other than the president, together with three Overseers. In addition, we are appointing faculty and student advisory groups to inform our deliberations, and planning a series of consultations with various alumni groups. Our intention is to reach out broadly to solicit both general advice and specific nominations.

Your responses to this letter will be a critical element of that process. We hope you will take the time to share your perspectives with us. Please e-mail your thoughts to psearch@harvard.edu, or address correspondence to the Harvard University Presidential Search Committee, Loeb House, 17 Quincy Street, Cambridge, MA 02138. The committee will hold your replies in strict confidence.

We look forward to hearing from you. Many thanks, and all best wishes.

Sincerely,
James R. Houghton
Senior Fellow, Harvard Corporation
Chair, Presidential Search Committee


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views of the necker cube – a pedagogic moment – kiwi

i’ve just read the book fern suggested i knot read, the people v. harvard law, dealing in part with the events of 2002 relating to my torts class. i feel i have been running away from that story, scolded and looked down upon for it. i had wanted to raise this story as part of the study of character in my evidence class this winter, but was strongly advised against it by my dean. dersh’s advice in the book is right on: i should not have backed away from the pedagogic moment.

the book is not without errors (i don’t recall that the author ever spoke with me). he has mixed up elizabeth warren with alvin warren, and has me helping daniel ellsberg with his dalliances – no. he has me “traipsing” and has put bags under my eyes, which makes me wince. but the basic story is there.