Press Releases
Dec 13 2011
Harvard Business School Launches U.S. Competitiveness Project
Dean Nitin Nohria today announced the launch of the U.S. Competitiveness Project, a comprehensive effort to generate ideas and actions that boost the ability of companies in the U.S. to compete in the global economy and raise American living standards. The announcement included the introduction of a new digital forum (hbs.edu/competitiveness) dedicated to the topic and comes two weeks after the School hosted a Summit of 100 CEOs, labor leaders, scholars, and current and former senior government officials.
Dec 09 2011
TV's "Shark Tank" Panelists Share Their Wisdom with HBS Students
BOSTON—Since 2009, Harvard Business School students have flocked to Associate Professor Noam Wasserman's second-year elective, Founders' Dilemmas, which he designed for MBA candidates who plan to become involved in new high-potential ventures in one way or another, from founders and investors to board members and hires. In 2011, Inc. magazine named Founders' Dilemmas one of the top entrepreneurship courses in the country.
Dec 09 2011
Seeking a Solution: Dante Roscini on the European Debt Crisis
BOSTON—European ministers and central bankers gathered in Brussels yesterday and today to try to find ways to save the euro and the euro zone by solving the debt crisis that is threatening not just Europe but the world economy. According to Harvard Business School's Dante Roscini, a former investment banker, with the stakes so high, failure is not an option.
Dec 06 2011
Annual Research Awards Presented to Five Doctoral Students
BOSTON—The Harvard Business School Doctoral Programs, directed by Kathleen McGinn, the School's Cahners-Rabb Professor of Business Administration, have presented four Wyss Awards for Excellence in Doctoral Research and one Martin Award for Excellence in Business Economics to five Harvard doctoral candidates. These prizes are presented annually to outstanding students engaged in innovative dissertation research.
Dec 05 2011
Harvard Business School Breaks Ground for New Executive Education Complex
BOSTON—Ratan Tata, head of India's famed Tata Group and a 1975 graduate of Harvard Business School's Advanced Management Program for senior executives, joined Dean Nitin Nohria, former Dean Jay Light, and HBS alumnus and benefactor C.D. "Dick" Spangler at a groundbreaking ceremony at the School last Friday night (Dec. 2) for Tata Hall, a new executive education complex scheduled for completion in Dec. 2013.
Dec 01 2011
Harvard Business School Professor Emeritus Abraham Zaleznik Dead at 87
BOSTON—Harvard Business School Professor Emeritus Abraham Zaleznik, a renowned authority on leadership and social psychology, died in Boston on Monday, Nov. 28, at the age of 87. At the time of his death, he was the School's Konosuke Matsushita Professor of Leadership.
Nov 21 2011
Harvard Business School Professor Emeritus Charles M. Williams Dies at 94
BOSTON—Harvard Business School Professor Emeritus Charles M. Williams, a renowned authority on commercial banking and a master of the art of case method teaching who influenced the lives and careers of thousands of MBA students and executives around the world, died of congestive heart failure on Nov. 17, at the North Hill retirement community in Needham, Mass. He was 94 years old. His wife of 65 years, Betty (Elizabeth Huffman), and their two children were at his side. At the time of his death, Williams was the School's George Gund Professor of Commercial Banking Emeritus. From 1960 to 1966, he had served as the Edmund Cogswell Converse Professor of Finance and Banking.
Nov 18 2011
Harvard Innovation Lab Opens
BOSTON—Harvard University officially launches the Harvard Innovation Lab today with a ribbon-cutting ceremony and remarks by President Drew Faust, Boston Mayor Thomas M. Menino, and Business School Dean Nitin Nohria. The ceremony will be followed by an open house and self-guided tours of the Allston facility.
Nov 10 2011
Gauging Groupon's Public Offering
BOSTON—Groupon's initial public offering made a big splash in the stock market last Friday, but according to Robert Wheeler, a Fellow at Harvard Business School's Forum for Growth and Innovation, how investors value the stock in the long term is a more important test for this and other IPOs.
Nov 03 2011
Harvard Business School Professor Paul. R. Lawrence Dies at 89
BOSTON—Paul R. Lawrence, a renowned sociologist and a pivotal figure in the intellectual history of Harvard Business School who was one of the world's most influential and prolific scholars in the field of organizational behavior, died on Tuesday, Nov. 1, of prostate cancer at the Carleton-Willard retirement community in Bedford, Mass. He was 89. At the time of his death, he was the School's Wallace Brett Donham Professor of Organizational Behavior Emeritus. His research, published in 26 books and numerous articles, dealt with the human aspects of management. In particular, he studied organizational change, organization design, and the relationship between the structural characteristics of complex organizations and the technical, market, and other conditions of their immediate environment.
Oct 31 2011
Harvard Business School Announces First-Round Winners for Minimum Viable Product Funding
BOSTON—Harvard Business School's (HBS) Arthur Rock Center for Entrepreneurship has announced seven winners of the first round of Minimum Viable Product (MVP) Funding for the 2011-2012 academic year, offering a total of $50,000 in total awards to student entrepreneurs.
Oct 28 2011
Harvard Business School Names Building after Media Pioneer Frank Batten
BOSTON—Harvard Business School (HBS)has named a building on its Soldiers Field campus in honor of leader, entrepreneur, and philanthropist Frank Batten (MBA 1952). The building at 125 Western Avenue in Allston that formerly housed public broadcasting's WGBH studios will now be called Batten Hall.
Oct 26 2011
Portrait of Former Dean Jay Light Unveiled in Baker Library
BOSTON—The portrait of former Harvard Business School (HBS) Dean Jay Light, George F. Baker Professor of Administration Emeritus, was recently unveiled in the foyer of the School's Baker Library/Bloomberg Center, where it hangs among portraits of his predecessors. The painting was done by the well-known artist John Howard Sanden, who numbers among his other subjects David Rockefeller and William Clay Ford of Ford Motor Company.
Oct 25 2011
Harvard Business School Professor Richard Rosenbloom Dies at 78
BOSTON—Richard S. Rosenbloom, the David Sarnoff Professor of Business Administration Emeritus at Harvard Business School and an authority on the management of technology and innovation, whose teaching and pioneering research had a significant impact at HBS and beyond for more than five decades, died on Oct. 24 in New York City. He was 78 and had been in declining health for the past two years.
Oct 24 2011
Harvard Business School's Business and Environment Initiative to Host Conference in 2013
BOSTON—In the last decade, a growing number of for-profit corporations around the world have started to augment voluntarily their annual financial reports with reports on corporate sustainability, corporate social responsibility, and corporate environmental performance, among others. The financial crisis that began in 2008 has generated additional momentum for corporate accountability reporting.
Oct 07 2011
Three Harvard Business School Faculty Comment on the Life and Legacy of Steve Jobs
BOSTON—Visionary, revolutionary, perfectionist, titan of industry, Steve Jobs had an extraordinary impact on the lives of millions of people around the world, changing the nature of the computer and the way people communicate and access information and entertainment. Three Harvard School professors examine his life and the lasting legacy he leaves behind for the ages.
Oct 06 2011
HBS Faculty Make the Call On the New iPhone4S
BOSTON—Under Steve Jobs's leadership, Apple revolutionized telephony with the coming of the iPhone. On Tuesday, the company unveiled its latest version — the iPhone 4S — only one day before Jobs died. Several members of the HBS faculty reacted to the long-anticipated event.
Oct 06 2011
Harvard Business School Faculty Remember Steve Jobs
BOSTON—News of the tragic death yesterday of Steve Jobs reverberated around the world. And the Harvard Business School campus was no exception. Everyone felt a keen sense of loss for a man who was an iconic figure in the worlds of technology, entrepreneurship, innovation, and design. A number of faculty members gave their views on a legendary life and career.
Oct 04 2011
Harvard Business School NamesThirteen Entrepreneurs-in-Residence
BOSTON—Thirteen entrepreneurs will serve the Harvard Business School (HBS) community this year as Entrepreneurs-in-Residence (EiR). Sponsored by the School's Arthur Rock Center for Entrepreneurship, the Entrepreneur-in-Residence program, now in its sixth year, invites accomplished entrepreneurs to HBS to advise MBA students interested in starting companies and work with faculty on research and course development.
Sep 27 2011
Harvard Business School's Rebecca Henderson Named University Professor
BOSTON—Rebecca M. Henderson, an expert on organizational responses to large-scale technical shifts, most recently in regard to energy and the environment, and currently the Senator John Heinz Professor of Environmental Management at Harvard Business School, has been named the John and Natty McArthur University Professor by Harvard President Drew Faust, the University announced today. A University Professorship is the highest honor that can be bestowed on any Harvard faculty member. The McArthur chair honors former HBS dean John H. McArthur and his wife. A long-time member of the HBS faculty, McArthur served as the School's dean from 1980 to 1995.
Sep 27 2011
Yo-Yo Ma and the Silk Road Ensemble Entertain and Inform at Harvard Business School
BOSTON—Famed cellist Yo-Yo Ma's Silk Road Ensemble, a collection of premier musicians from around the world who play a potpourri of instruments — from the violin and cello to the gaita (Spanish bagpipe) and the sheng (a Chinese reed instrument)--made its way to Harvard Business School's Spangler Center Lounge yesterday to offer a lunchtime concert to a large group of students, faculty, and staff. The Ensemble, part of Yo Yo Ma's Silk Road Project, a nonprofit organization dedicated to multicultural and interdisciplinary exchange, is spending at week in residency at Harvard University to compose new music and mentor student musicians.
Sep 15 2011
Boston Redevelopment Authority Approves Tata Hall Construction
BOSTON—Harvard Business School (HBS) has received approval from the Boston Redevelopment Authority (BRA) for its plans for Tata Hall, a new Executive Education classroom and residential building to be constructed on the HBS campus in Boston.
Sep 01 2011
Five Graduates Receive the 2011 Harvard Business School Alumni Achievement Award
BOSTON—In a series of special events yesterday, including a panel discussion attended by the 918 members of the MBA Class of 2013 on their first day of school, Harvard Business School (HBS) bestowed its highest honor, the Alumni Achievement Award, on five distinguished graduates: Peter Harf, chairman and CEO, Joh. A. Benckiser SE; Seth Klarman, president, The Baupost Group; Robert Kraft, founder, chairman and CEO, The Kraft Group; Karen Gordon Mills, administrator, U.S. Small Business Administration; and Hüsnü Özyeğin, founder and chairman, FiBA Group.
Aug 15 2011
HBS Faculty Offer International Perspective On Debt Ceiling and Market Turmoil
Fallout from the debt-ceiling debates and subsequent downgrading of America's credit rating has raised uncertainty in the markets to heights not seen since 2008. To this point, the focus has been primarily on what actions the U.S. will take right the ship. How does this situation affect other global powers? Professors Niall Ferguson and Robert Pozen offer their perspectives on how other nations are viewing and acting upon the turmoil in the U.S.
Aug 08 2011
HBS Faculty on Downgrading US Debt
When Standard and Poor's Rating Services lowered its long-term sovereign credit rating on the United States from AAA to AA+ on August 5, it was a shot heard 'round the world. Stock markets plummeted, investors covered their eyes, consumers' confidence and pocketbooks took another beating, and the blame game engulfed politicians and S&P itself. In the midst of all this angst, four Harvard Business School faculty members offer their views on what went wrong and what needs to be done to right the US ship of state.
Aug 08 2011
Summer Venture in Management Program Offers Insights into Harvard MBA Experience
A group of some 79 students recently took part in a lively case discussion in a Harvard Business School classroom about Hulu, the online video service that provides access to TV shows and movies. "The company is using a 100% ad model, but the CEO is thinking about a subscription model or a combination of ads and subscriptions. Why?" asks Associate Professor Anita Elberse, coauthor of the case and an expert on strategic marketing in creative industries. A flurry of hands goes up. The professor continues with more questions, back and forth for 80 minutes. And when it's over, many of the students gather round Professor Elberse to continue the discussion. A scene, it appears, straight out of the Harvard MBA program.
Aug 04 2011
Twelve New Books By Harvard Business School Faculty
BOSTON—Twelve books authored or coauthored by Harvard Business School faculty members were published recently covering a wide array of management topics.
Jul 27 2011
New Harvard Business School Exhibit Explores "Railroads and the Transformation of Capitalism"
BOSTON—A new exhibit, Railroads and the Transformation of Capitalism, opened yesterday in the north lobby of Baker Library | Bloomberg Center on the Harvard Business School campus in Boston. Organized by the Baker Library Historical Collections, part of the School's Knowledge and Library Services, the exhibit is free and open to the public and HBS community. It will run until Feb. 4, 2012.
Jul 25 2011
Countdown in Washington
As the August 2 deadline for resolving the debt- limit crisis draws ever nearer, Harvard Business School senior lecturer Robert Pozen offers a proposal that would cut spending and raise revenues in a way that would still appeal to many Republicans. At the same time, Professor of Management Practice Robert Steven Kaplan urges politicians to keep an open mind about the financial issues they face rather than take a blind but binding pledge not to increase taxes or close loopholes, no matter what.
Jul 15 2011
Bad News at News Corp.
The News Corporation/News of the World scandal has been described as a case study in bad management. What was there about the company's organizational culture that led to "Murdoch's Mess"? Professor Michel Anteby, who studies how meaning is built at work and how moral orders are sustained, provides an answer. And what is there about Murdoch himself that leaves him such a scorned and isolated figure in the midst of all this? Professor Rosabeth Moss Kanter, an authority on innovation and change, adds her insights. Finally, what are some lessons for boards of directors? Professor of Management Practice and leadership expert Robert Steven Kaplan comments on these issues.
May 27 2011
Professor Rob Kaplan Addresses MBA Oath
On Class Day 2011 Harvard Business School hosted the nonprofit MBA Oath on campus for a public recitation of the oath by graduating students. The School has done so each of the last three years since the inaugural year of the MBA Oath. Students, their families and members of the faculty and staff attend the event.
May 26 2011
Harvard Business School Celebrates 101st Commencement
BOSTON—Harvard Business School (HBS) held its 101st Commencement exercises this afternoon. At the diploma ceremony, held on the green in front of Baker Library/Bloomberg Center, nine hundred and thirty-six students received their MBAs, while eight were awarded doctorates in business administration. In addition, in conjunction with the Harvard Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, nine graduate students earned Ph.D. degrees. Three other doctoral candidates received degrees earlier in the academic year.
May 25 2011
Healthcare Entrepreneur Kathy Giusti Addresses MBA Class of 2011
BOSTON—In a moving speech today that was a central part of Harvard Business School's Class Day ceremonies, Kathy Giusti (MBA 1985) told the 936 members of the MBA Class of 2011, their families, and friends of a life-changing journey that began for her on January 12, 1996, when she was diagnosed with multiple myeloma, a rare blood cancer that her oncologist told her was "100 percent fatal," as he advised her to put her life in order, since she had only three years to live.
May 16 2011
Dean's Award Honors Student Service to School and Society
BOSTON—Four members of the Harvard Business School MBA Class have been named winners of the School's prestigious Dean's Award. The recipients, who will be recognized as members of two teams by HBS Dean Nitin Nohria at Commencement ceremonies on the HBS campus on May 26, are Andrea M. Ellwood, Brett C. Gibson, Kathleen M. Hebert, and Justine K. Lelchuk.
May 10 2011
Harvard Business School Professor Clayton Christensen Wins McKinsey Award
BOSTON—Harvard Business School (HBS) professor Clayton M. Christensen, the world's foremost authority on disruptive innovation, has received the 2010 McKinsey Award from Harvard Business Review for his article "How Will You Measure Your Life?" He is the School's Robert and Jane Cizik Professor of Business Administration and a four-time recipient of the award, which recognizes the best article published in the magazine that year.
May 02 2011
MBA Students Comment on Turmoil in the Middle East and North Africa
BOSTON—The Middle East and North Africa are in the midst of extraordinary political and social changes that have made headlines around the globe. This whirlwind of events is especially important to a number of Harvard Business School MBA students who have roots in the region. We asked five of them (including several who are also earning master's degrees in public policy at Harvard Kennedy School) to share their views.
Apr 29 2011
Harvard Business School Names 2011 Social Entrepreneurship Fellow
BOSTON—Harvard Business School has awarded the 2011 to Rakhi Mehra (MBA 2009). Mehra was selected for her work in co-founding micro Home Solutions (mHS), a social initiative for developing sustainable housing solutions for the urban poor. Her achievement was recognized at this year's HBS Business Plan Contest, where teams of student entrepreneurs compete to win cash and in-kind services.
Apr 29 2011
Harvard University Announces Appointment of Gordon Jones as Director of Harvard innovation lab
BOSTON—Gordon S. Jones has been named the inaugural Director of the Harvard innovation lab, a new and innovative initiative set to launch in late 2011 that will foster team-based and entrepreneurial activities, and provide a forum, both physically and virtually, for interactions among students, faculty, alumni, and the surrounding community. Located at 125 Western Avenue in Allston, which formerly housed the WGBH-TV offices and studios, the innovation lab will complement Mayor Thomas M. Menino's Innovation agenda and help revitalize Western Avenue.
Apr 28 2011
Harvard Business School Holds 15th Annual Business Plan Contest
BOSTON—A device that will revolutionize spinal fusion operations, an online Web site for selling products to babies in Brazil, and new software that turns a mobile phone into an accurate but inexpensive tool for diagnosing heart and lung disease were the big winners in the final round of the Harvard Business School Business Plan Contest. The event, held before a large and appreciative audience in Burden Auditorium on Tuesday afternoon (April 26), marked the 15th anniversary of the for-profit business venture track and the 11th year of the social venture track, which focuses on creating social value via nonprofit, for-profit, or hybrid-model plans. The capstone of the School's extensive Entrepreneurial Studies curriculum, the contest awards prizes totaling more than $150,000 in cash and in-kind services to the winners and runners-up in both tracks.
Apr 27 2011
HBS Professor Emeritus James I. Cash, Jr., and Senior Lecturer Robert. F. Higgins Elected to American Academy of Arts and Sciences
BOSTON—Two Harvard Business School faculty members have been elected members of the American Academy of Arts & Sciences (AAAS), one of the country's most prestigious honorary societies and a leading center for independent policy research. James I. Cash, Jr., the James E. Robison Professor of Business Administration, Emeritus, and Robert F. Higgins, Senior Lecturer and cofounder and general partner of the venture capital firm of Highland Capital Partners, join a group of 212 new members chosen from academia, business, public affairs, the arts, and the humanities.
Apr 26 2011
Harvard Business School Holds Second Alumni New Venture Contest
BOSTON—Teams led by entrepreneurial Harvard Business School alumni representing twelve U.S and international regions presented business plans for their start-ups to judges on Monday during the final round of the School's second annual Alumni New Venture Contest.
Apr 25 2011
Harvard Business School Professor Emeritus Renato Tagiuri Dead at 91
BOSTON—Renato Tagiuri, Professor of Social Sciences in Business Administration, Emeritus, at Harvard Business School (HBS) and a renowned expert on interpersonal relations and the human aspects of management as well as a pioneer in the field of family businesses, died on April 15 at Brookhaven in Lexington, MA. He was 91.
Apr 22 2011
Kathy Giusti (MBA '85) To Address HBS Students on Class Day 2011
BOSTON—Harvard Business School alumna Kathy Giusti , founder and CEO of the Multiple Myeloma Research Foundation (MMRF) and the Multiple Myeloma Research Consortium (MMRC), will give Harvard Business School's (HBS) Class Day keynote address to graduating students on Wednesday, May 25, as part of a student-led ceremony traditionally held the day before Harvard University's Commencement exercises and the HBS diploma ceremony.
Apr 20 2011
HBS Faculty Comment on Environmental Issues for Earth Day
BOSTON—Earth Day focuses the world's attention on the both the dangers and opportunities facing the planet. But sustainability and the intersection between business and the environment are issues that need to be addressed all the time, as cities grow, resources diminish, and ecosystems are threatened by both nature and humankind. We asked a group of Harvard Business School faculty members to offer their views on the many facets of "going green."
Apr 18 2011
Harvard Business School Announces New Leadership Fellows
BOSTON—After receiving their degrees this spring, eight members of the Harvard Business School MBA Class of 2011 will begin working in nonprofit and public-sector organizations through the School's Leadership Fellows Program. Now in its tenth year, the program provides Fellows with a one-year position in a nonprofit or public-sector organization where they can make a significant impact. Since 2001, the program has placed 97 Fellows with 44 organizations. Participating organizations pay Fellows $45,000, and Harvard Business School (HBS) supplements that with a one-year grant of an equal amount. Throughout the year, Fellows also benefit from access to HBS resources and return to campus for organized networking and professional development events with other Fellows.
Apr 08 2011
Harvard Business School Social Enterprise Initiative Adds Six Experts to Advisory Board
BOSTON—The Harvard Business School Social Enterprise Initiative, which engages with the nonprofit, for-profit, and public sectors to apply innovative business practices and managerial disciplines to drive sustained social change, announced today that it has named six new members to its advisory board: Matt Bannick (MBA 1993), managing partner, Omidyar Network; Jean Case, chief executive officer, Case Foundation; Helene Gayle, MD, president and chief executive officer, CARE USA; Mario Morino, chairman, Venture Philanthropy Partners; Jeff Raikes, chief executive officer, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation; and Nancy Roob, president and chief executive officer, Edna McConnell Clark Foundation.
Mar 29 2011
Harvard Business School Receives Papers of Benefactor George Fisher Baker
BOSTON—Harvard Business School (HBS) recently received a significant collection of papers, photographs, and memorabilia belonging to George Fisher Baker (1840-1931) and his family. Baker was the prominent financier and philanthropist whose $5 million donation to Harvard University in 1924 (with an additional $1 million gift a year later) funded the construction of the School's campus in Boston. Designed by the renowned architectural firm of McKim, Mead and White, the residential campus officially opened in June 1927, with Mr. Baker present at the age of 87. Appropriately, its iconic centerpiece is the Baker Library (now Baker Library | Bloomberg Center), where the collection will be permanently housed. The donation was made by members of the Baker family.
Mar 15 2011
Harvard Business School Faculty Comment on Crisis in Japan
BOSTON—As Japan continues to come to grips with the devastating toll exacted by the earthquake within its borders, the aftershocks are just beginning to be felt within the global economy. Here, several Harvard Business School faculty members share their views and insights about the challenges that lie ahead for Japan's business leaders and for global companies operating in Japan.
Mar 02 2011
HBS Faculty on Revolution in the Middle East and North Africa
BOSTON—From Tunisia to Egypt, Bahrain to Yemen, as a number of nations in North Africa and the Middle East go through cataclysmic changes, the world watches and wonders what the future may hold as myriad protestors risk their lives for revolutionary change. Four Harvard Business School faculty members—Deepak Malhotra, an authority on negotiation strategy; Noel Maurer, an expert on the politics and economics of the energy business; Magnus Thor Torfason, an authority on how behavior is influenced by the social structures of individuals and organizations; and Tarun Khanna, an expert on emerging markets, examine these historic events through the lens of their research.
Mar 01 2011
Harvard Business School Announces Winners of Student Start-Up Competition
BOSTON—Harvard Business School's (HBS) Arthur Rock Center for Entrepreneurship has announced nine winners of Minimum Viable Product (MVP) Funding, a new pilot program offering $50,000 in total awards to student entrepreneurs working on projects during the School's winter term.
Feb 22 2011
Harvard Business School Graduate Avi Kremer Leads Fight To Find a Cure for Lou Gehrig's Disease
BOSTON— In 2004, Avi Kremer was on top of the world. His resume detailed the trajectory of a rising star: captain in the Israeli Defense Forces; graduate of Technion—the Israeli Institute of Technology; project manager at Elbit Systems, the largest private defense company in Israel; and a newly admitted member of the Harvard Business School MBA Class of 2007.
Jan 24 2011
Harvard Business School Introduces Program to Help Realize Opportunities in Emerging Markets
BOSTON—Harvard Business School (HBS) announced a new Executive Education program, Building Businesses in Emerging Markets which will take place on the HBS campus in April 2011. As the global economy continues its rapid transformation, businesses across many industries are looking to tap into the vast potential of emerging markets. According to a recent report published by PwC, The World in 2050, the largest E7 emerging economies are likely to be bigger than the current G7 economies by 2020, measured by GDP in purchasing power parity (PPP) terms. This program is designed to provide participants with frameworks to understand emerging markets, identify new business opportunities, and optimize their organization's business strategy and its execution in specific countries.
Jan 10 2011
Much Ado about Starbucks
Starbucks made a splash heard round the world last week when it showed off the new version of its logo. For Harvard Business School business historian and branding expert Nancy F. Koehn, that sort of reaction is perfectly in keeping with the company's approach to branding.
Jan 05 2011
Baker Library I Bloomberg Center Exhibit Examines the History of Personal Credit
BOSTON—A new exhibit, "Buy Now, Pay Later: A History of Personal Credit," opened recently in the Baker Library | Bloomberg Center lobby on the Harvard Business School campus in Boston. The exhibit was organized by the Baker Library Historical Collections, part of the School's Knowledge and Library Services. The exhibit will run until June 3, 2011.