Thursday, July 31, 2008UChicago Faculty Protest New Milton Friedman InstituteFrom the Milton Friedman Institute website:“The goal of the Institute is to build on the University’s existing leadership position and make the Milton Friedman Institute a primary intellectual destination for economics by creating a robust forum for engagement of our faculty and students with scholars and policymakers from around the world,” said President Robert J. Zimmer. “The Milton Friedman Institute will continue Chicago’s extraordinary tradition of creating new ideas that stimulate the academic world and innovative approaches that influence policy.” If you have not yet read the original protest letter, it is here. The document speaks for itself, but the quality of its prose makes one wonder why professors of English would attach their names to it. Read U of C Graduate School of Business Professor John Cochrane's riposte here. Full post and comments below the fold. Posted by Katherine J. Murray at 9:41 PM (3 comments) Dartmouth Grads Scrape ByTen to Twenty years out of school, Dartmouth grads earn more money on average than the alumni of other American schools according to a recent study compiled by PayScale.com. Edging out the second place Princeton alums, who make $131,000 a year, the average Dartmouth alumnus makes $134,000 ten to twenty years after his graduation. The findings are particularly remarkable considering that recent graduates (within the last five years) make $58,000—good enough for only 18th place when compared to their peers. Forbes, which reported the findings, largely attributed the success of Dartmouth graduates to the loyal and tight alumni network. While Monica Wilson of career services, told Forbes that the success was based on the College’s success at creating well-rounded people. Dartmouth also placed well when schools' top ten percent of earners were averaged, coming in second behind Yale.Full post and comments below the fold. Posted by A.S. Erickson at 12:27 PM (14 comments) Wednesday, July 23, 2008More Newss From July 21, courtesy of Regret the Error:P.S. A reader points to this from the VNews as well: ![]() Full post and comments below the fold. Posted by A.S. Erickson at 2:57 PM (10 comments) Tuesday, July 22, 2008Are You Financially Literate?Dartmouth Econ. Prof. Annamaria Lusardi has devised the following test to determine a person's financial literacy. The results are disturbing. Only one third of the respondents that were older than fifty managed to get all three questions right. For the answers to the three questions and an interesting interview with Prof. Lusardi, follow this link.
P.S. More on Lusardi here. Full post and comments below the fold. Posted by A.S. Erickson at 11:19 PM (10 comments) Treasury Taps Wilson '69 Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson '68 has taken on fellow alum Ken Wilson '69 to help him sort out the financial mess the country is currently in. This is from today's Wall Street Journal (subscription required):In Mr. Wilson, Mr. Paulson gets a formidable ally in navigating the current problems, with years of Wall Street experience and a Rolodex of well-placed friends and clients. Mr. Wilson, the head of Goldman's financial-institutions group, has served as Wall Street's go-to banker during the last year, as firms from Wachovia Corp. to National City Corp. have turned to him for advice on their mortgage woes. Helping burnish Goldman's reputation: During the current crisis, it has managed to avoid some of the big mistakes that have plagued rivals such as Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. and Merrill Lynch & Co.Meanwhile, on one of the Journal's blogs, Heidi Moore remarks on the quiet presence of Dartmouth alumni all over the financial district. (Photo is courtesy of Reuters.) ![]() Full post and comments below the fold. Posted by A.S. Erickson at 9:07 PM (0 comments) Wednesday, July 16, 2008Hanover: New Arts Center is Hideous The Valley News ran a story today on the College's new Visual Arts Center. Construction on the building is scheduled to begin in the Fall of 2009. The building's location—southeast of the Hopkins Center—was chosen specifically to give a more grandiose southern entrance to Dartmouth. The project is not without controversy, as residents (quite rightly) fear that the new arts building will be as aesthetically disturbing as the Hopkins Center.College officials' upbeat presentation yesterday was a sharp contrast with the negative reviews from members of a Hanover community group the college convenes to discuss potentially sensitive matters.The whole story, here. Full post and comments below the fold. Posted by A.S. Erickson at 2:23 PM (34 comments) Tuesday, July 15, 2008Harvard Forced Out by AdministrationThis from today's (occasionally) Daily D:Andy Harvard, director of the Outdoor Programs Office, stepped down on Friday, according to an e-mail sent by acting Dean of Student Life Joe Cassidy. Several students and alumni associated with the Dartmouth Outing Club, however, said they were confused about the suddenness of Harvard’s departure and believed that Harvard likely did not step down voluntarily.Perhaps the most inadvertently hilarious claim was that "Palmer and Polashenski said many members of the DOC were “shocked” by Harvard’s departure and upset by the secretiveness surrounding the resignation." This from a segment of campus known for its opacity in things like selecting croo members and spreaders of goodwill. Nonetheless, the question is still out there: why was Harvard forced out? Especially when 76% of DOC members wrote to Dean Crady expressing their support for him. P.S. See the comments for more from DOC insiders. Also, if anyone knows the precise reasons for his dismissal, blitz me. P.P.S. Here is Davenport's Op-Ed, and a pdf of Polashenski's letter. Full post and comments below the fold. Posted by A.S. Erickson at 11:12 AM (56 comments) Monday, July 07, 2008Campaign Stops and the KlanA pair of interesting pieces in today's Wall Street Journal. First a book review of Michael Cohen's Live from the Campaign Trail by David Shribman '76:This year, so far, we have heard two speeches that aspired to greatness: Mitt Romney's treatise on religious freedom and Barack Obama's "more perfect union" remarks on race relations in America. Both were ambitious and provocative, but they were also derivative, haunted by echoes from nearly a half-century ago, when Sen. John F. Kennedy addressed the Houston Ministerial Association in September 1960. It was there that Kennedy attempted to address concerns that the nation would not elect a Roman Catholic to the White House.Also of interest is this piece by Dorothy Rabinowitz: Keith Sampson, a student employee on the janitorial staff earning his way toward a degree, was in the habit of reading during work breaks. Last October he was immersed in "Notre Dame Vs. the Klan: How the Fighting Irish Defeated the Ku Klux Klan."Read the whole thing. Full post and comments below the fold. Posted by A.S. Erickson at 12:41 PM (0 comments) Thursday, July 03, 2008Summertime TVA discussion between author Tom Wolfe and former Dartmouth Professor (and neuroscience expert) Michael Gazzaniga.Full post and comments below the fold. Posted by A.S. Erickson at 9:42 AM (3 comments) Saturday, June 28, 2008Lawsuit WithdrawnAs expected during the recent election, the new AoA Executive Committee has decided to terminate the AoA's lawsuit against the Board of Trustees. The College's press release is here.Full post and comments below the fold. Posted by A.S. Erickson at 4:52 PM (94 comments) Wednesday, June 25, 2008Open Thread: Presidential Search CommitteeThe members of the Presidential Search Committee were recently unveiled. There seems to be partisans from both sides of the alumni dispute on the committee, most prominently Martha Beattie '76 and Peter Robinson '79. This is an open thread concerning its make-up. Discuss.Full post and comments below the fold. Posted by A.S. Erickson at 8:48 PM (30 comments) How to Create a Nom de PlumeThere are numerous ways to avoid posting anonymously, but the following is the easiest:
Full post and comments below the fold. Posted by A.S. Erickson at 8:39 PM (0 comments) Saturday, June 21, 2008Haldeman: Conflicting Reports?The Daily Dartmouth finally got around to reporting yesterday that Dartmouth’s Board Chair Ed Haldeman will be stepping down from his post as Putnam Investment’s CEO and President—dartlog readers may recall our coverage of this event here several days ago.Haldeman will now be the chair of the company’s mutual fund unit. According to Haldeman, as reported in the Daily Dartmouth, “This transition has been anticipated for a very long period of time.” Specifically, according to the Daily D’s article, this transition has been anticipated for nearly two years. According to the Daily D: “Plans for Haldeman to step down began in fall 2006 when the Power Financial Corporation began negotiations to acquire Putnam.” However, according to the Boston Globe (June 13, 2008), as of this past spring, such a transition was not in the cards for the former CEO: “In May [2008], Haldeman disclosed that Power Financial had extended his contract at least through 2010, which a spokeswoman said at the time would keep him in the roles of chief executive and president.” Perhaps the editors at the Daily D should be forgiven; it may be they don't read the Boston Globe, sticking to the forwarded press releases from the Dartmouth administration instead. Full post and comments below the fold. Posted by Emily Esfahani-Smith at 7:10 AM (97 comments) Thursday, June 19, 2008Unethical Dealings by a Board Member?Trustee Leon Black is in the news.P.S. Here's more. Full post and comments below the fold. Posted by A.S. Erickson at 8:06 PM (10 comments) Presidential Search Committee AnnouncedHere.The following are the six members of the Board of Trustees on the committee:
Dartmouth faculty:
Student and alumna:
Full post and comments below the fold. Posted by A.S. Erickson at 10:26 AM (5 comments) Tuesday, June 17, 2008Haldeman, Denying Allegations, Steps Down as Putnam CEOTwo days after Dartmouth’s Association of Alumni results were announced, Dartmouth’s Board Chair Ed Haldeman told reporters in a June 12th teleconference that he will be stepping down as Putnam Investment’s CEO. Putnam Investments is a mutual funds firm based in Boston. During the media teleconference, Haldeman “insisted that the move has nothing to do with an allegation, put forward recently by a Putnam whistleblower, that Haldeman had known about the market-timing activity that had occurred years ago.” Readers of The Dartmouth Review may recall our coverage of this sordid affair some months ago.Market-timing at Putnam, which constitutes fraud, occurred as late as 2003. Haldeman joined Putnam in the fall of 2002 as the head of investments. In the wake of Putnam’s market-timing scandal, which made headlines in 2003, Haldeman replaced then-CEO Larry Lasser as the company’s CEO in November, 2003. Those who know the former CEO suggest that Haldeman will land on his feet after this stumble; we at The Dartmouth Review offer former-CEO Haldeman our best wishes. Full post and comments below the fold. Posted by Emily Esfahani-Smith at 1:45 PM (29 comments) |
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