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President and Fellows of Harvard

Copyright 1998 by the President and Fellows of Harvard College All rights reserved... [Pg.2]

R. S. Kaplan and D. P. Norton, Breakthrough Results with the Balanced Score-card, Report Collection, 2nd ed., the President and Fellows of Harvard College, April 19, 2005. [Pg.79]

E.N. Jacobsen etal, US Patent 6,262,278 (July 17, 2001) Assignee President and Fellows of Harvard College Utility Stereochemical Intermediates... [Pg.165]

Figure 12.2. The ACT 1, architecture (Reprinted by permission of the publishers from J. R. Anderson, The architecture of cognition [Cambridge, MA Harvard University Press, copyright 1983 by the President and Fellows of Harvard College])... Figure 12.2. The ACT 1, architecture (Reprinted by permission of the publishers from J. R. Anderson, The architecture of cognition [Cambridge, MA Harvard University Press, copyright 1983 by the President and Fellows of Harvard College])...
FIGURE 17.3 Competencies the roots of competitiveness. (Reprinted with permission of Harvard Business Review. Exhibit from "The Core Competency of the Corporation" by Gary Hamel and C.K. Prahalad, May-June, 1990. Copyright 1990 by the President and Fellows of Harvard College all rights reserved.)... [Pg.220]

Source Reprinted by permission of Harvard Business Renew. Exhibit from "What is the Right Supply Chain for Your Product" by Marshall Fisher, March-April, 1997. Copyright 1997 by the President and Fellows of Flarvard College all rights reserved. [Pg.45]

P.C. Meltzer etal, US Patent 6,171,576 (January 9, 2001) Assignee Organix Inc. and President Fellows of Harvard College and Massachusetts Institute of Technology Utility Early Diagnosis Agent for Neurodegenerative Disorders... [Pg.144]

Makhluf J. Haddadin was born in Main, Jordan. He holds B.S. and M.S. degrees (Professor C. H. Issidorides) from the American University of Beirut and a Ph.D. degree from the University of Colorado, USA (Professor A. Hassner). He was a research fellow at Harvard University (Professor L. F. Fieser). The art of heterocyclic chemistry has been his main hobby as he worked on heterocyclic steroids, isobenzofurans, isoindoles, quinoxaline 1,4-dioxides (the Beirut reaction), pyridazines, tetrazines, 277-indazoles, and other heterocycles. He rejoined his alma mater in 1964 and currently serves as professor of chemistry. He was vice-president for academic affairs (1987-99). [Pg.319]

WILLIAM D. CAREY is Executive OflGcer of the American Association for the Advancement of Science and Publisher of SCIENCE Magazine. Previously, he was a Vice-President of Arthur D. Little, Inc., following a long career in the Bmeau of the Budget where he was Assistant Director with general responsibilities for federal science policy. He holds AB and MA degrees from Columbia University and a MPA from Harvard, where he was a Littauer Fellow. [Pg.276]

In Washington after the invasion of Poland the Carnegie president gathered with a group of fellow science administrators—Frank Jewett, president of Bell Telephone Laboratories and the National Academy of Sciences James Bryant Conant, the young president of Harvard, a distin-... [Pg.336]

Charles P. Casey received his early education in St. Louis, Missouri (B.S. in chemistry, St. Louis University, 1963). His graduate research with George M. Whitesides at the Massachusetts Institute for Technology (MIT) was on organocopper compounds. After receiving his Ph.D. in 1967, he spent several months at Harvard University as a National Science Foundation (NSF) fellow in the laboratories of Paul D. Bartlett. In 1968, he joined the faculty at the University of Wisconsin-Madison where he is now Homer B. Adkins Professor of Chemistry and Steenbock Professor in the Physical Sciences. He was department chair at Wisconsin from 1998 to 2001. He was President of the American Chemical Society (ACS) in 2004. [Pg.46]

Christopher S. Foote received his B.S. from Yale University and his Ph.D. from Harvard University. His scholarly credits include Sloan Fellow Guggenheim Fellow ACS Baekland Award ACS Cope Scholar Southern California Section ACS Tolman Medal President, American Society for Photobiology and Senior Editor, Accounts of Chemical Research. He was a Professor of Chemistry at UCLA. [Pg.6]

Raymond Fuoss was a 20 century polymath who spoke 19 languages fluently. He entered Harvard at 17 and had published extensively by the time he graduated in 1925. He was a Sheldon Fellow at the University of Munich and worked with Wieland, Fajans and Lange. Eventually he entered Brown University to work with Charles A. Kraus, the famous electrochemist and ACS President. He graduated in 2 years after writing his actual thesis with Lars Onsager on irreversible processes in non-aqueous solvents. He remained at Brown until 1935 when the General Electric Company made him an offer he could not refuse. [Pg.61]


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President and Fellows of Harvard College

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