This issue of
the Faculty Newsletter features commentary on the release of the Goodwin Procter report (Editorial; "MIT: Where Now?"; "Straighten Up & Fly Right"; From The Faculty Chair).
This issue contains important articles on the Jeffrey Epstein funding scandal and related issues from Professors Leigh Royden and Rosalind Williams, . . .
The August 2019 revelations that the MIT Media Lab had accepted donations from convicted pedophile Jeffrey Epstein sparked an upheaval among MIT faculty.
Nat King Cole’s classic song, “Straighten Up and Fly Right,” offers an apropos breather for those of us troubled by the commutative entanglement of EC and GP:
On January 10 the Executive Committee of the MIT Corporation released the long-awaited report by the law firm of Goodwin Procter titled “Concerning Jeffrey Epstein’s . .
It is with great sorrow that we acknowledge the passing of Professor Emeritus of Physics Aron Bernstein. A former member of the Faculty Newsletter Editorial Board . . .
At the September Institute faculty meeting, one of us lamented the difficulty of knowing what to do regarding MIT’s receipt of gifts from Jeffrey Epstein. That difficulty . . .
The members of the Ad Hoc Faculty Committee on Guidelines for Outside Engagements were selected by Faculty Chairs Susan Silbey and Rick Danheiser . . .
MIT is in a unique position to establish an Institute-wide center with the capacity to address recurring problems provoked by rapid technological change. Our world . . .
On January 28, 2020, the MIT Council on Family and Work invited our entire MIT community of approximately 26,000 members to complete the 2020 Quality of Life . . .
There are some 98 MIT alumni chapters, 1,200 MIT faculty and leadership, and 365 days in the year. Given that each MIT faculty member has, on average, five extra- . . .
The Office of the Vice Chancellor and the Registrar’s Office are pleased to announce this year’s MacVicar Day program. The event will take place on Friday, March 13 . . .
I greatly appreciated Ruth Perry’s piece on changes at the MIT Coop and the sidelining of books (“A Bookstore Without Books,” MIT Faculty Newsletter, Vol. XXXII No. 2).