1. Harvard - Noun
2. Harvard - Proper noun
American philanthropist who left his library and half his estate to the Massachusetts college that now bears his name (1607-1638)
a university in Massachusetts
Source: WordNet1940s: Intellectual exchange with Schutz, Voegelin, Dodd and other debates Parsons met Alfred Schutz (Schütz) during the rationality seminar, which he conducted jointly together with Joseph Schumpeter at Harvard in the spring of 1940. Source: Internet
1940 Cotton Mather, A Bibliography by TJ Holmes, Harvard University Press. Source: Internet
About the Black Harvard professor Henry Louis Gates, who was arrested by a white officer as he tried to break into his own home, Obama considers his view as “more particular, more human, than the simple black-and-white morality tale.” Source: Internet
A 2006 Op-Ed in The New York Times by Harvard University Professor in Sociology Robert J. Sampson says that immigration of Hispanics may in fact be associated with decreased crime. Source: Internet
According to Aldo Musacchio, a professor at Harvard Business School, state capitalism is a system in which governments, whether democratic or autocratic, exercise a widespread influence on the economy either through direct ownership or various subsidies. Source: Internet
According to Harvard Toxicology, injecting bleach or drinking disinfectant causes hemolysis—where red blood cells that carry oxygen break apart—and cause liver damage. Source: Internet