NewsMakers
Herzlinger Gives Talks at Mayo, Nat'l Healthcare Management Institute
Regina E. Herzlinger, the Nancy R. McPherson Professor of Business
Administration at the Business School, was honored this past summer as the
1998 Donald C. Ozmun and Donald B. Ozmun and Family Lecturer at the Mayo
Foundation. This month, Herzlinger initiated an endowed lecture series on
health care management at the National Healthcare Management Institute,
sponsored by the Ohio Hospital Association.
Herzlinger researches the transformation of the American health care
industry and managerial challenges in the nonprofit sector. Her latest books
include Conducting Your Financial Checkup: A Practical Guide for Nonprofit
Managers and Board Members (Jossey-Bass, 1999) and Market-Driven
Health Care (Addison-Wesley, 1997).
Willie, Bililies Elected to Board at Judge Baker Children's Center
Charles V. Willie, professor of education and urban studies at
the Graduate School of Education, and Theodore C. Bililies, instructor
in the Department of Psychiatry at the Medical School, have been elected
to the board of trustees of the Judge Baker Children's Center, an affiliate
of the Medical School.
Willie is the former host of Inner City Beat, a weekly national
public affairs television program. Bililies is vice president and general
manager of Personnel Decisions International, Boston.
Law School's Ogletree Receives Equal Justice Award
Charles Ogletree, professor of law, received an Equal Justice
Award on his 15th anniversary as chair of the board of directors at the
Southern Center for Human Rights. Ogletree also directs the Law School's
Criminal Justice Institute.
The award was presented at the Center's award dinner on Oct. 6 in Washington,
D.C. Sen. Edward M. Kennedy was a guest speaker at the dinner.
The Center has, for over 22 years, provided free legal representation
to people facing the death penalty or subject to cruel conditions or practices
in Southern prisons and jails.
History Graduate Student Wins Grant To Do Research in Russia
Barbara J. Keys, a graduate student in history, has won a five-month
grant from the International Research & Exchanges Board (IREX) to conduct
field research in Russia. Her interests include Soviet cultural diplomacy
in the 1930s, especially the use of international sports as a tool of diplomacy,
as a means of studying Soviet participation in the international system,
and the effects of global popular culture on internal Soviet developments.
IREX is a Washington, D.C.-based nonprofit organization.
Copyright
1998 President and Fellows of Harvard College
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