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MIT Corporation elects 11 term members, three life members 4 June

The MIT Corporation - the Institute's board of trustees - elected nine full-term members, who will each serve for five years; two partial-term members;.

MIT Corporation elects 11 term members, three life members

Credits: Courtesy of the Office of the Corporation Previous image Next image The MIT Corporation the Institute’s board of trustees elected nine full-term members, who will each serve for five years; two partial-term members; and three life members, during its quarterly meeting today. Corporation Chair Diane Greene SM ’78 announced the election results; all positions are effective July 1. The nine full-term members are: Lindsay Androski ’98; Eran Broshy ’79; Ashton Carter; Fiona Chen ’21; Kevin Churchwell ’83; Grace Colón PhD ’95; Diane Hoskins ’79; Pearl Huang ’80; and Ray Rothrock SM ’78. The two partial-term members are: Michael “Mick” Mountz ’87; and Mark Wrighton. The three life members are: Patricia Callahan ’75, SM ’77; Alan Levanthal; and Kenneth Wang ’71.

Companies take on the challenge of increasing diversity, aiding Black-owned businesses

Companies take on the challenge of increasing diversity, aiding Black-owned businesses Shirley Leung © Pat Greenhouse/Globe Staff From left, Daniel Acheampong, Tia Thomson and Yasmin Cruz, Co-founders of Visible Hands VC, are photographed at the Bank of America branch in Nubian Square. The bank has made equity investments in minority-owned venture capital firms like theirs. Not shown is Justin Kang. Turns out, that was the easy part. How companies have deployed the money is proving to be as crucial as how much they’ve promised, or even how much they’ve given out so far. Take, for example, Bank of America, which pledged $1.25 billion over five years toward promoting racial justice and creating economic opportunities for all. The centerpiece of its efforts and where the bulk of the first year’s disbursements have gone is a novel program to fund minority-owned venture capital firms that back under-represented entrepreneurs.

Rep Katherine Clark leads bipartisan push to help kids with serious health conditions get quicker out-of-state care

Boston s hospital chiefs moonlight on corporate boards at rates far beyond the national rate

Boston’s hospital chiefs moonlight on corporate boards at rates far beyond the national level Hospital chiefs and trustees defend this as boosting public-private partnerships, but critics say these board positions - some paying millions of dollars - raise troubling issues of conflict of interest and hospital priorities. By Liz Kowalczyk, Spotlight fellow Sarah L. Ryley, Mark Arsenault and Spotlight editor Patricia Wen Globe Staff and Globe Staff,Updated April 3, 2021, 4:54 p.m. Email to a Friend Globe Staff/Photo Illustration by Globe Staff As chief of Boston Children’s Hospital, one of the most esteemed pediatric hospitals in the world, Sandra Fenwick had outsized influence. After the pandemic struck last spring, she used that clout to lobby Massachusetts legislators for more money for telemedicine, a suddenly essential alternative to in-person visits.

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