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The contributors listed on the tax return include billionaire Republican megadonor Jeff Yass, who Accuracy in Media said gave it $1 million. The family foundation of shipping supply magnate Richard Uihlein is also identified on the tax return, which says the Ed Uihlein Family Foundation gave $10,000. According to its tax return, Accuracy in Media said it received $15,000 from the Coors brewing family's charitable foundation. But AIM president Adam Guillette told CNBC Yass had been misidentified, and he did not give to the organization. Nonprofit groups are not required to release their donors' names publicly, but they are required to report to the IRS the names of donors who gave $5,000 or more.
Persons: Claudine Gay, Pat Greenhouse, Jeff Yass, Richard Uihlein, Ed Uihlein, Milstein, Adam Milstein, Adolph Coors, Peter H, Janine, John Harvard, Joseph Prezioso, Adam Guillette, Guillette, Phil Headley, Uihlein, Israel, Ben Curtis Organizations: Harvard, Harvard University, Boston Globe, CNBC, Media, Foundation, Milstein Family Foundation, Internal Revenue, Coors, Adolph Coors Foundation, Molson Coors, Susquehanna International Group, Pro, Harvard University in, Afp, Getty, IRS, CNBC Yass, JBS, Company, AIM, Nonprofit, Independent Women's, South, IWF, Amazon, Project Veritas, Harvard College Locations: Yass, Uihlein, Harvard University in Cambridge , Massachusetts, South Carolina, Israel, Gaza, Harvard University in Cambridge
Meet the Disney heirs rallying behind Bob Iger
  + stars: | 2024-03-03 | by ( Jordan Hart | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +5 min
Roy O. Disney's grandchildrenRoy O. Disney had one son with his wife Edna Francis — Roy E. Disney, a long time Walt Disney Company executive. Roy P. DisneyRoy P. Disney told NYT that activist investors "must be defeated." AdvertisementIn a 2010 interview, Roy P. Disney said he worked as an investor based in California. Joe Scarnici/Stringer/Getty ImagesWalter Elias Disney MillerWalter Miller is the co-founder of the Walt Disney Family Museum, which opened its doors in 2009. Tamara Diane MillerTamara Miller spent four years as the President of the board of directors of the Walt Disney Family Museum.
Persons: , Roy, Walt Disney, Bob Iger, Nelson Peltz, Walt, Roy O, Disney, Edna Francis — Roy E, Roy E, Patricia Ann Dailey, Roy P, Disney Roy, George Pimentel, WireImage, Disney's, hasn't, Abigail Disney Abigail Disney, Ralph Orlowski, Burda Media Abigail Disney, she's, Abigail, Susan Disney, Susan Lord, Phillip Faraone, Tim Disney Tim Disney, Stefanie Keenan, Tim Disney, Diane Disney Miller, Sharon Disney, Diane Miller's, Ron Miller, Jennifer Goff, Tammy Miller, Joanna Miller, Walter Miller, Joe Scarnici, Stringer, Walter Elias Disney Miller Walter Miller, Joanna Sharon Miller Joanna Miller, grandpa, Joanna, Jim, Tamara Diane Miller Tamara Miller, Tamara Miller, Jennifer Miller, Goff Jennifer Miller, Goff Organizations: Service, Disney, Business, Walt Disney Company, Getty, New York Times, Burda Media, Yale, Stanford, Mouse, Bel, Harvard University, California Institute of, Arts, Walt Disney Productions, Walt Disney Family Museum, Jim Hill Media, Walt Disney Family Locations: California, Munich, Germany, Columbia, Los Angeles
CNN —Former Chilean President Sebastian Pinera has died in a helicopter crash in Chile. At the time of the crash, there was widespread rainfall in the area, but it is unclear if the weather caused the crash. Pinera, who was 74 years old, was Chile’s president from 2010 to 2014 and again from 2018 to 2022. The unrest led then-outgoing President Pinera to agree to a popular vote about the need to change the constitution inherited from the dictatorship. “I met President Pinera several years ago.
Persons: CNN —, Sebastian Pinera, of Interior Carolina Tohá, Pinera, Gabriel Boric, , , Pinera’s, Michelle Bachelet, ” Boric, Luis Lacalle Pou, Javier Milei Organizations: CNN, CNN — Former Chilean, Chilean, of Interior, Harvard University, Forbes, Banco Locations: Chile, Ríos, Chilean, United States, San Jose, Uruguay, Argentina
WASHINGTON — Social media researcher Joan Donovan says she knows the exact moment her career began to go off the rails. "I got called into the principal's office and was questioned about why I'm talking about Facebook," Donovan said. In a statement to CNBC, Harvard Kennedy School Director of Public Affairs James Smith disputed Donovan's account of her departure. "The narrative is full of inaccuracies and baseless insinuations, particularly the suggestion that Harvard Kennedy School allowed Facebook to dictate its approach to research." Smith told CNBC that Harvard University and the Kennedy School continue to carry out misinformation and social media research to this day.
Persons: Harvard Kennedy, Joan Donovan, Donovan, John F, Frances Haugen, Haugen, Elliot Schrage, Schrage, Nick Clegg, Clegg, didn't, Douglas Elmendorf, Dean Elmendorf, Sheryl Sandberg, Sandberg, Elmendorf, Mark Zuckerberg, Priscilla Chan –, , Zuckerberg's, Guillermo S, Hava, Eleanor V, Wikstrom, , Chan, Public Affairs James Smith, Smith, Kennedy, Chan Zuckerberg, Donovan's Organizations: Harvard, Media Politics, WASHINGTON — Social, Harvard University, Kennedy School of Government, Dean's Council, CNBC, Meta, Facebook, Dean's, Kennedy School, Elmendorf, Harvard's Kennedy School, Twitter, Google, Washington Post, Initiative, Technology, Research, Whistleblower, Massachusetts, U.S . Department of Education's, Civil Rights, Harvard Kennedy School, Public Affairs, School, Kennedy, Media, Politics, Public, Tech, Chan Zuckerberg Initiative Locations: Malden, Harvard, Central, Dean's, FBarchive.org
Protesters demonstrated over the war in the Gaza Strip at Harvard University in Cambridge, Mass., this month. Photo: brian snyder/ReutersThe U.S. Education Department’s Office for Civil Rights on Tuesday added Harvard University to the list of schools the agency is investigating as part of a federal crackdown on race- and religious-based harassment since the start of the conflict in Gaza began last month. Harvard is the 15th school and 8th college or university added to the list since the conflict began Oct. 7, according to the agency’s website. Other colleges include The University of Pennsylvania, Wellesley College and Columbia University. The number of schools under investigation this year doubled since the conflict started.
Persons: brian snyder Organizations: Harvard University in, U.S, Education Department’s, Civil Rights, Harvard University, Harvard, The University of Pennsylvania, Wellesley College, Columbia University Locations: Gaza, Harvard University in Cambridge
(AP) — Charlie Munger, who helped Warren Buffett build Berkshire Hathaway into an investment powerhouse, has died at a California hospital. Berkshire Hathaway said in a statement that Munger’s family told the company that he died Tuesday morning at the hospital just over a month before his 100th birthday. “Berkshire Hathaway could not have been built to its present status without Charlie’s inspiration, wisdom and participation,” Buffett said in a statement. Munger and Buffett began buying Berkshire Hathaway shares in 1962 for $7 and $8 per share, and they took control of the New England textile mill in 1965. He also gave a significant portion of his Berkshire stock to his eight children after his wife died in 2010.
Persons: Charlie Munger, Warren Buffett, Berkshire Hathaway, ” Buffett, Munger, Buffett, “ Charlie, Buffett’s, Ben Graham, ” Munger, ” Edward Jones, Jim Shanahan, Cathy Seifert, ” Seifert, didn’t, Charles T, See’s Candy, it’s, , Investor Whitney Tilson, Tilson, you’ve, ” Tilson, hadn’t, Josh Funk Organizations: Daily Journal Corp, Wall Street Journal, CNBC, Columbia University, Berkshire Hathaway, BNSF, Apple, CFRA, Buffett, Buffalo News, Wesco, Investor, University of Michigan, Army Air Corps, Harvard University, Harvard, Westlake, Stanford University Law School, Huntington Library, Samaritan Hospital, Westlake School, Costco Wholesale Corp Locations: OMAHA, Neb, Berkshire, California, New England, Los Angeles, Pasadena, Munger, Omaha , Nebraska, Omaha, Southern California, ,
In 2023, a record number of low-income students took Advanced Placement exams. AdvertisementIn 2023, 38 percent of all test-takers scored a 1 or 2, with low-income students posting higher failure rates. The College Board, reflecting on its own analysis, stated that AP coursework boosts students across the board, independent of their respective scores on the exam. In 2023, a record 1.1 million students from low-income households took AP exams, per The Times. Overall, 5.2 million students sat down for AP exams in 2023, a more than threefold increase from 2002, when 1.6 million students took the exams.
Persons: , Scott Eisen, David Coleman, Trevor Packer Organizations: Board, Service, College Board, AP, The New York Times, The Times, The, Harvard University in, Times Locations: United States, Harvard University in Cambridge , Massachusetts,
Meads still encouraged his kids to go to college because he was worried his success was a one-off. NEW LOOK Sign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. AdvertisementAdvertisementCisco's top executive in the UK has something in common with Bill Gates: he doesn't have a college degree and doesn't think you need one either. "I never did anything academically beyond my GCSEs [exams taken at 16 in the UK] and never went to university," Meads told Fortune. But Meads still pushed his children to go to university because he was worried that his success might be a one-off.
Persons: David Meads, Meads, , Bill Gates, Fortune, you've, didn't, Paul Allen, it's Organizations: Cisco's, Service, Ireland, Siemens, Meads, Harvard University, Microsoft
A sign hangs on a gate of a building at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts, U.S., July 6, 2023. REUTERS/Brian Snyder Acquire Licensing RightsOct 9 (Reuters) - Prominent Harvard University alumni on Monday denounced a pro-Palestinian statement from students that blamed Israel for violence engulfing the region and urged the university to take action against the signatories. A coalition of 34 Harvard students organizations said they "hold the Israeli regime entirely responsible for all unfolding violence" following decades of occupation, adding that "the apartheid regime is the only one to blame." Harvard President Lawrence Summers, the former U.S. Treasury Secretary under Democratic President Bill Clinton and former university president, was one of several Harvard graduates to criticize the current Harvard leadership for failing to respond. Senator Ted Cruz, a Harvard Law School graduate, wrote on X: "What the hell is wrong with Harvard?"
Persons: Brian Snyder, Israel, Claudine Gay, Lawrence Summers, Bill Clinton, Summers, Elise Stefanik, Ted Cruz, Daniel Trotta, Jamie Freed 私 Organizations: Harvard University in, REUTERS, Harvard University, Monday, Harvard, Liberation, American Resistance Organization, Reuters, U.S . Treasury, Democratic, Republican U.S, Representative, Harvard Law School Locations: Harvard University in Cambridge , Massachusetts, U.S, Gaza, Israel, New York
A sign hangs on a gate of a building at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts, U.S., July 6, 2023. REUTERS/Brian Snyder/File Photo Acquire Licensing RightsWASHINGTON, Oct 10 (Reuters) - A pro-Palestinian statement from Harvard University students that blamed Israel for violence engulfing the region does not speak for the educational institution as a whole or its leadership, Harvard University President Claudine Gay said on Tuesday. "Let me also state .... that while our students have the right to speak for themselves, no student group — not even 30 student groups — speaks for Harvard University or its leadership," Gay said in a statement. Palestinian Islamist group Hamas' attack on Israel on Saturday left hundreds dead. Harvard is the most influential university in U.S. politics, having produced eight former presidents and four of the nine current Supreme Court Justices.
Persons: Brian Snyder, Israel, Claudine Gay, , Gay, Kanishka Singh, Sandra Maler Organizations: Harvard University in, REUTERS, Rights, Harvard University, Monday, Harvard, Hamas, Saturday, Gaza's Health, Liberation, American Resistance Organization, Gay, Thomson Locations: Harvard University in Cambridge , Massachusetts, U.S, Palestinian, Israel, Washington, Gaza
Though I'm grateful to be a Harvard student, I'm more than my intellect. Of course, I can look back on years of hard work. But all my hard work, self-reflection, and achievements came to define me with one title: Harvard student. At dinner, my mother wore a shirt emblazoned with a bright "Harvard 2027" across the chest that the Harvard Coop had sent in my acceptance package. AdvertisementAdvertisementI owe everything to my family's generational hard work and sacrifice, yet all of that became insignificant in a moment.
Persons: I'm, , Harvard Coop, wasn't Organizations: Harvard, Service, Harvard University Locations: Cambridge, Caribbean, America
When I got into Harvard last year, everyone started treating me differently. Though I'm grateful to be a Harvard student, I'm more than my intellect. Of course, I can look back on years of hard work. But all my hard work, self-reflection, and achievements came to define me with one title: Harvard student. AdvertisementAdvertisementI owe everything to my family's generational hard work and sacrifice, yet all of that became insignificant in a moment.
Persons: I'm, , Harvard Coop, wasn't Organizations: Harvard, Service, Harvard University Locations: Cambridge, Caribbean, America
Over the years, Murdoch's family has also risen into the spotlight — accompanied by stories of vindictive business tactics and inter-family rivalries. WHO IS LACHLAN MURDOCH? Lachlan has been CEO for Fox Corp. since 2019, following Disney's acquisition of 21st Century Fox. Lachlan rose to executive ranks of the family business, then known collectively as News Corp, in the 1990s and early 2000s. James Murdoch is Lachlan's younger brother, also among the children from their father's second marriage.
Persons: Rupert Murdoch, Lachlan, Murdoch, Australia —, James, Elisabeth, Prudence, ” Murdoch, LACHLAN MURDOCH, Lachlan Murdoch, Anna, , Fox's, Roger Ailes, JAMES MURDOCH, James Murdoch, James —, ” James, Murdochs, ELISABETH MURDOCH, Elisabeth Murdoch, Murdoch's, PRUDENCE MURDOCH MACLEOD, Prudence Murdoch MacLeod, Patricia, Prudence didn’t, CHLOE MURDOCH, Grace, Chloe Murdoch, Rupert Murdoch’s, Wendi Deng, Chloe, Kathryn Murdoch Organizations: — Media, Monday, Fox News, News Corp, HBO, Fox Corp, Fox, Century Fox, Fox Television, New York, CNN, Illyria Pty, WHO, News . Corp, Street Journal, Harvard University, Rawkus Records, Star India, Sky, British Sky Broadcasting, Sky Networks, Shine, Endemol, Times Newspapers, News UK, Yale University, Stanford University, AP Locations: Adelaide, Australia, U.S
My first day of classes at Harvard started at 8:30 in the morning and ended at midnight. I had my first Chinese lecture, which was difficult, and then a seminar on socialism. Between classes, I watched "Legally Blonde," ate in the dining hall, and joined a running club. But I was most excited to finally start classes. Here's what my first day of classes was like as a Harvard freshman.
Organizations: Harvard, Service, Harvard University Locations: Wall, Silicon
FRANKFURT, Aug 28 (Reuters) - Bayer (BAYGn.DE) said an experimental stem cell therapy developed by its U.S. subsidiary BlueRock had shown signs of easing Parkinson’s disease symptoms in an early 12-patient trial. The German drugmaker announced the trial had succeeded in a brief summary in June, saying it was a first for a stem-cell Parkinson's therapy, but held back details for a medical conference. The five participants on a lower dose experienced 0.72 hours longer per day with well-controlled symptoms on average and the time of worsening symptoms was 0.75 hours shorter per day for them. For BlueRock's experimental therapy, the researchers took human pluripotent embryonic stem cells and transformed them into dopamine-producing nerve cells. Parkinson's, for which there is no cure and which affects more than 10 million people worldwide, causes progressive brain damage.
Persons: BlueRock, Christian Rommel, Bayer's, Britain's, Ludwig Burger, Susan Fenton Organizations: FRANKFURT, Bayer, U.S, drugmaker, International Congress, Cambridge University, South Korea's, CHA Hospital, Cyto Therapeutics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Harvard University, Japan's Kyoto University Hospital, Thomson Locations: Copenhagen, Denmark, Australia, United States
Microsoft's cofounder Bill Gates lacked motivation when he was at school and was 'lazy' at math. "Early on in math, I was kind of lazy," 67-year-old Gates said. "And a teacher in eighth grade said, you know: 'How come you're so lazy? Gates explained that the teacher would give him books to read and push him to do better. However, Gates has encouraged students to stick out the full four years of college to get the best out of their education.
Persons: Bill Gates, Sal Khan –, Gates, we're, Paul Allen Organizations: Harvard University, Microsoft, Morning, Khan,
Highly successful people possess a skill that helps them get and stay ahead, says a Harvard-trained executive coach: They listen with curiosity. "It's really not that hard," Muriel Wilkins, co-founder of leadership consulting firm Paravis Partners, recently told the "Radical Candor" podcast. Listening is the biggest and the most underused skill that helps drive empathy, and a lot of other things as well." Nearly all (96%) professionals consider themselves to be good listeners, according to 2015 research from Accenture, a IT consulting company. However, 50% of adults don't recall what they hear only moments after hearing it, a 2013 Carnegie Mellon study reported.
Persons: Muriel Wilkins, Wilkins, they've, Everette Taylor, Taylor, Warren Buffett Organizations: Harvard, Paravis Partners, Accenture, Carnegie Mellon, American Psychological Association, Harvard University, Catalyst, CNBC
[1/2] Students and pedestrians walk through the Yard at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts, U.S., March 10, 2020. Democratic President Joe Biden's administration had defended that long-standing practice in the court cases against Harvard University and the University of North Carolina. The ruling left some questions unanswered, and more legal challenges by conservative activists are expected targeting diversity initiatives in education and corporate America. Education Secretary Miguel Cardona said promoting campus diversity remained important even after the ruling. But the departments said universities may consider how race has affected an applicant's life, such as in an applicant's essay.
Persons: Brian Snyder, Biden, Joe Biden's, Miguel Cardona, , Nate Raymond, Jarrett Renshaw, Jonathan Oatis Organizations: Harvard University in, REUTERS, U.S, Supreme, Education, Justice, Democratic, Harvard University, University of North, America, Justice Department, Department's, Civil, Harvard, Thomson Locations: Harvard University in Cambridge , Massachusetts, U.S, University of North Carolina, Boston, Washington
CNN —There’s a new coronavirus variant topping the leaderboard in the United States: EG.5. And it represents another incremental tweak to the virus rather than a major evolutionary leap like the original Omicron strain. This mutation has appeared in other coronavirus variants before. EG.5 also now has its own offshoot, EG.5.1, that adds a second mutation to the spike. Topol says the US can’t afford to delay its Covid-19 vaccine rollout.
Persons: CNN —, it’s, David Ho, ” Ho, , Eric Topol, Anne Hahn, Dan Barouch, virologist, ” Topol, Mandy Cohen, Topol, Dr, Sanjay Gupta Organizations: CNN, EG, US Centers for Disease Control, Columbia University, Scripps, Research, World Health Organization, Yale School of Public Health, Harvard University, US Food and Drug Administration, CDC, CNN Health, FDA Locations: United States, Northeast, FL, Ireland, France, Japan, China, Boston
There are a lot of things Sheryl Sandberg wishes she could tell her 20-year-old self. But she'd start with this: Don't be afraid to speak up at work. Sandberg left Meta in August 2022 after 14 years at the company. Sandberg's tech career didn't take off until 2001 when she joined Google as general manager of its business unit. 1 best piece of advice for regular investors, do's and don'ts, and three key investing principles into a clear and simple guidebook.
Persons: Sheryl Sandberg, Sandberg, Zuckerberg, didn't, Meta, We've, Warren Buffett, Organizations: Meta, LeanIn.org, CNBC, Harvard University, World Bank, Harvard, McKinsey & Co, Google, Lean Locations: Airbnb
Here are five more tech companies which changed their names — some controversially, and others leading to success. From The Facebook to Facebook, then MetaMark Zuckerberg at Harvard University, three months after The Facebook was created. But the business plan was first written for a company called Cadabra, as in a magician's "Abracadabra." Before Twitter became X, X.com became PayPalPeter Thiel, left, and Elon Musk, right, hold VISA credit cards branded with the X.com company logo on October 20, 2000. Paul Sakuma/APElon Musk cofounded the online payment company X.com in 1999 before it merged with Peter Thiel's Confinity a year later.
Persons: Elon Musk, Musk, Mark Zuckerberg, Rick Friedman, Sean Parker, Justin Timberlake, Zuckerberg, that's, Frances Haugen, Sergey Brin, Larry Page, Martin Magunia, Brin, Sundar Pichai, Mike Krieger, Kevin Systrom, Stephen Chernin Instagram, Andreessen Horowitz, Krieger, Systrom, Instagram, Jeff Bezos, Evan Agostini, , Bezos, Mackenzie Scott, X.com, PayPal Peter Thiel, Paul Sakuma, AP Elon Musk, Peter Thiel's Confinity, Jimmy Soni's, Thiel, Walter Isaacson Organizations: Twitter, PayPal, Morning, Facebook, Harvard University, Meta, VR, Reality Labs, Google, Getty, Stanford, Microsoft, REUTERS, Baseline Ventures, Stanford University, Inc, Amazon, AP Elon, eBay Locations: Burbn
Harvard Yard, on the campus of Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts. The ruling is considered a massive blow to decades-old efforts to boost enrollment of minorities at American universities through policies that took into account applicants' race. "Without considering race, there would be a reduction in the number of underrepresented students of color." "This idea, essentially striking down affirmative action, on its surface will result in less diverse classes," said Robert Franek, editor-in-chief of The Princeton Review. "The ruling does allow for students to express, through their essay or otherwise, things about themselves that could include race," Franek also noted.
Persons: Maddie Meyer, Christopher Rim, Cara McClellan, Robert Franek, Kelly Slay, John Roberts, Franek, Organizations: Harvard, Harvard University in, Getty, Command, University of North, Racial, Civil Justice Clinic, University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School, University of California, Michigan, Urban Institute, The Princeton, Vanderbilt University, Colleges, Finance, SUNY Locations: Harvard University in Cambridge , Massachusetts, University of North Carolina
Moskovitz, who is still known by many as a co-founder of Facebook, started Asana in 2008 to make work more collaborative through software. Following the purchase of 480,000 Asana shares in June, Moskovitz's ownership swelled to 111.4 million shares, representing over 51% of outstanding stock. Even after rallying 66% this year, Asana shares are more than 80% below their record high from late 2021. Moskovitz has agreed not to buy all outstanding Asana shares or even acquire ownership of 90% of the common stock. Moskovitz declined to talk about whether he was buying up shares to prevent activist investors from coming in and trying to force change.
Persons: Asana's Dustin Moskovitz, Moskovitz, Asana, It's, Cari, ChatGPT, it's, Mark Zuckerberg, Chris Hughes, Eduardo Saverin, Zuckerberg Organizations: Facebook, CNBC, Meta, Good Ventures, National Science Foundation, University of California, Harvard University, New York Stock Exchange Locations: Berkeley
Harvard Yard, on the campus of Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts. This year's high school graduating class faced one of the toughest college-application seasons on record. "Acceptance rates may have bottomed out." Harvard University, for instance, received more than 56,000 applications and admitted just 3.4% to the Class of 2027. Other universities, including Princeton, Yale and Columbia, also had acceptance rates below 5%.
Persons: it's, Hafeez Lakhani, Lakhani Organizations: Harvard, Harvard University in, Ivy League, Finance, SUNY, Harvard University, Princeton, Yale Locations: Harvard University in Cambridge , Massachusetts, New York, Columbia
CNN —Harry Belafonte, the dashing singer, actor and activist who became an indispensable supporter of the civil rights movement, has died, his publicist Ken Sunshine told CNN. Bettmann Archive/Getty Images Belafonte, left, plays a school principal in a scene from the film "See How They Run" in 1952. Bettmann Archive/Getty Images Belafonte poses with the Emmy Award he won in 1960 for the musical special "Tonight With Belafonte." Fred Sabine/NBCU/Getty Images Belafonte and other recipients of Albert Einstein Commemorative Awards display their medallions after being honored in 1972. He is survived by his wife Pamela, his children Adrienne Belafonte Biesemeyer, Shari Belafonte, Gina Belafonte, David Belafonte, two stepchildren Sarah Frank and Lindsey Frank and eight grandchildren.
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