WSBT News asks, "The biggest mystery about Sierra's forthcoming 'The Bourne Conspiracy' game: Why doesn't Jason Bourne look anything like Matt Damon?" Apparently, the answer to that question has a lot to do with the actor's personal taste in video games.
Not all of Harvard's most influential alumni actually, well, exist. Here are 10 alums who are bound to live on in American culture.
Harvard graduates have a reputation for flying particularly high, but the alumni bulletin rarely provides a good story about getting burned. To fill the void, we’ve assembled the most egregious cases of Harvard Hubris in recent memory, and their attendant comeuppance.
“Young people are bright people. They are not indentured to received wisdom.” That was the rationale behind the monetary support of Martin Peretz, editor of the New Republic, for Gotham Partners, a hedge fund started by two freshly minted HBS grads in 1996. Inexperience didn’t keep Bill Ackman, 26, or David Berkowitz, 31, from jumping on the hedge fund wagon, nor did it keep investors from putting up $30 million in cash.