Showing posts with label harvard. Show all posts
Showing posts with label harvard. Show all posts

Saturday, August 20, 2011

Smart Tips For Your Personal And Business Success Today……….The students return to Cambridge, August 2011…. I welcome them, remember…and smile.

Smart Tips For Your Personal And Business Success Today……….The students return to Cambridge, August 2011….  I welcome them, remember…and smile.


By Dr. Jeffrey Lant Author’s program note:

There could only be one song to accompany this article,the theme from the 1970 film “Love Story,” written by Harvard classicist Erich Segal. You see, this article is about a love story, too, a love for a special place…and for a lifetime of memories launched from this very neighborhood.  Start by going to any search engine and finding the lush “Love Story” theme… designed to put you in the mood for memories… deep, poignant, infinitely touching, forgiving.It has been 42 years now, almost to the minute, since I first arrived in Cambridge,Massachusetts to commence my Harvard education. It was, in fact, the Friday of Labor Day week-end, and I arrived here without benefit of previous visit, without knowing a single person, and with an incipient case of mononucleosis. To compound the challenges, I had about $50 to my name.And yet, when I first saw Harvard Square… then Harvard Yard… I knew that I was exactly where I wanted to be… exactly. Such insistent insights irrevocably change lives.The privileged students of Harvard are now just beginning  to arrive, the anxious freshmen…desperate not to show the anxieties they could not hope to conceal; the insouciant upper class-men, omniscient, whose every move tells the world that they have been here before and are now the repository of the Harvard mystique, which they know…and defy the rest to find, if they can.The returning students are keen to put you in your place by retailing the stories of their life-shaping, exotic, privileged summer vacations. This one drops the name of a well-known candidate with at least a chance for the White House. “I had lunch with him just the other day,” the student avers. He does not say the candidate had dropped into a sandwich shop in New Hampshire to shake hands.He bought a tuna on dark rye, extra pickles, to go. He gulped a bit, handed the balance to the student who was go-fer of the day. Such was the lunch they shared… but while the actuality was unimpressive, the massaged tale more than serves its purpose of enhancing the student’s perceived altitude in the pecking order, where perception is everything.And every Harvard student is a master of perception.Other returning students drop the names of congressmen in whose crowded offices they interned. There are the many who served the green movement… the others who scrutinized the “must see” locations of a dozen European countries,including the young woman entertained at dinner by the president of Latvia,who just happened to be a distant cousin. The welcoming meeting was capped by a photograph of the president en famille with cousin, autographed of course, very much on display in the student’s dorm room where the flag of Latvia was immediately visible and impressive upon entrance. Harvard students know the value of presidents,to whose powers and office many naturally aspire.The returning students have a pecking order for everything, including just when and how they return. Upper class men in positions of power and influence (like editors of”The Crimson,” the most influential student newspaper in the nation) come early.They wish to demonstrate their seriousness and control. The best writers, including those already published in “Cosmo” or the “Village Voice” with even a soupcon of name recognition, come later, at the very last moment. They wish editors to know they are beyond the mundane banalities of time and place… from the very way they enter the newsroom,they tell you the paper is the better for their presence, not the other way round. It’s an advantage they intend to press. Such students, an early book and film deal already in the offing, know not only the essentials of smooth condescension but the knack of sailing near the edge of impudence and imprudence, without missing a beat. Too, they know the secrets of a glamor so serviceable on a walk down Holyoke Street… or a book jacket with attitude. They walk. Heads turn and boys from small towns and respected families know the misery of sharp desire… never to be fulfilled.These students, who scoff at the unending ways aristocrats at the Court of Versailles insulted their inferiors while toadying to those they intend to insult tomorrow, are themselves and undeniably masters of such nuances. Who is greeted, how they are greeted, whether there is allowable physical contact or not and where,all these are subject to the most arcane rules and procedures. You have only to watch a small group of students as they walk through the Yard to see it on full display.Find the person in the middle of the group, the most verbal, the most voluble, the most directive, without even a scintilla of hesitation or doubt. He is on display…a beau brummell, for all his shoes are scuffed and jeans ripped. A cox comb, a popinjay,he yet has claims to your life… and  makes suggestions with impunity on what you must do and how… whilst  his followers listen, follow and take no liberties, for all they want to. Their  time will come… and they will put these invaluable insights to work…Some students, of course, do not participate in these tribal rites of the young and upwardly mobile. Instead, they sit in their unkempt rooms and vow terrible vengeanceon the chosen ones whom they envy and dream of. Years from now they write novels and memoires about how miserable and oppressed they were. They were neither,of course, they just didn’t know what to do and lacked the gumption required to take their places amongst the glorious.Jenny Cavalleri could have gone either way.Jenny Cavalleri was a character in “Love Story” so great a hit that people worldwide came to Harvard to see where its protagonists cavorted, played, and loved. She came from no family either and, but for an accident of fate, might have gone through four lackluster years at the College, and then married a suitable Italian boy passing muster with her father.But she knew how to wisecrack… and one deftly timed comment opened her way to a world as unknown as Mars, where those selected by God and birth to flourish had names like Oliver Barrett IV and Harvard buildings named after clever ancestors, the better to mark you, too, for life and ease your way.Oliver Barrett IV was most assuredly in… and he was determined that Jenny should be in, too… but she, famously, died young, the experiment incomplete and inconclusive.Youthful disdain.Like many people in Cambridge, I did not read “Love Story” or even see the film in 1970.They were, after all, infra dig and would never do. I probably thought like many here abouts that he, a renowned classicist, had let down the side by writing something so UN-Harvard.But then I was firmly in the thrall of what one did and didn’t do to make friends and influence the right people.Years later, when I did my book “Our Harvard” I asked Erich Segal class of ’58 to provide a chapter. He couldn’t have been nicer or more professional to work with. He opened his-essay with this paragraph:”In September 1954 I and a thousand or so other freshmen gathered in Cambridge, sharing the confident assumption that, having been chosen for Harvard, we were, ipso facto, the best and the brightest. And that very first day we learned the most painful lesson of our young  lives: most of  our classmates were better and brighter. We spent the rest of our college years coming to terms with this and spent the rest of our lives trying to disguise it. This is the root cause of the infamous Harvard arrogance.” Now a brand-new crop of Harvard students is arriving, each to learn this truth and promptly lock it away, as they master the ways of getting others, especially  those better and brighter than they, to believe what they want them to  believe… When they fully learn this lesson, they will not only be a success at Harvard… they will be ready to take on the world and leave it breathless at their high skills, unmatched abilities,and, most of all, a charm that moves mountains and peoples of every kind. And it will all occur just paces from me… while I watch and enjoy, as I have for so very many years, with many more to come.
About the Author Harvard-educated
Republished with author’s permission by Howard Martell http://HomeProfitCoach.com
Check out Google Cash Monster ->  http://www.HomeProfitCoach.com/?rd=nt55xgzO

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

Canada’s Liberal Party crushed as Michael Ignatieff takes them to historic defeat May 2, 2011. The real question is why they let him try….

by Dr. Jeffrey Lant
?Here is the music to celebrate the “defeat” of Mr. Ignatieff. Should it be celebrated? Well not as to his politics, but as to his experience. Dr. Lant went to school with the lad. See what he has to say below.
Author’s note: Michael Ignatieff and I were classmates at Harvard University. We were in the same “track” together, Modern European History. Each week for a year (1969-1970) we gathered for the colloquium which enabled H. Stuart Hughes, chairman of the History Department, to scrutinize us and decide who would advance to the Ph.D. program and who would be given the terminal Master’s Degree. Our class consisted of just a dozen students, or less. We came to know each other very well… He smoked gold tipped Sobranie, the Russian word for “‘sovereign” (current price $55 for 200)… his cigarette always a prop in his presentation.
Count Michael.
If there were any justice in the world, Michael Georgevitch Ignatieff would be waking up this morning on his wide acres near Smolensk as Count Michael, his paternal grandfather Count Pavel Ignatieff, the Russian Minister of Education during the First World War, grandson of Princess Natasha Mestchersky. But in 1917, the acres, the grand estates and country houses, the privileges and baubles from the Tsar, even the Tsar himself were all swept away… still, you will never understand Michael Ignatieff if you do not understand that he is a Russian aristocrat to his very fingers…. and that he longs for a world that was once his… a world long ago and far away from Canada. It’s all there in his 1987 book “The Russian Album”, which that year won the Governor General’s Award for Non-Fiction.
Born May 12, 1947
Ignatieff was born in Toronto, elder son of Russian-born Canadian diplomat (Count) George Ignatieff and his Canadian-born wife, Jessie Alison (nee Grant). His childhood was peripatetic as his father moved up the diplomatic ranks, ultimately becoming chief of staff to Prime Minister Lester Pearson. Michael Ignatieff got used to being around important people and their privileged lives. He became adept at the great game of moving up, by pleasing the influential, being in the right place at the right time, and always considering which move to make and when to make it. Every glittering prize in the world was available if you knew how to get it… and Michael Ignatieff was eager to learn…
He studied history at the University of Toronto’s Trinity College (B.A., 1969) where Bob Rae was his debating partner and fourth-year roommate. (Rae went on to become Ontario’s 21st premier 1990-1995 and one of the few Liberals to survive the debacle under Ignatieff.)
Restless, always in motion.
Ignatieff moved on again…. this time to Oxford University where he studied with celebrated liberal philosopher Sir Isaiah Berlin about whom he would later write. Then Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts where he earned his PhD in 1976. Then the University of British Columbia (assistant professor from 1976 to 1978)…. then senior research fellow at King’s College, Cambridge until 1984. He then moved to London where he began to focus on his career as writer and journalist.
It was impressive, it was distinguished, it was rootless… and it was certainly not the standard career path of a politician who needed to understand and connect with real people and their everyday concerns. Michael Ignatieff’s career was becoming as recherche as his cigarettes… rare, exquisite, far-fetched. This would have been fine… except he hankered after political office and political power… and the plaudits and esteem which only come when one is the demonstrated “People’s Choice”. But could he get there by writing himself into power… without submitting himself to the messy business of politics? Could he reach the top of the greasy pole (as British statesman Benjamin Disraeli called it) by being wafted there and without a drop of grease on his refined, fastidious person?
That was Michael Ignatieff’s most astonishing idea of all…
Was there a precedent in the politics of Canada, Britain, or the United States of a man who went for the highest of offices without learning the craft of politics and the messy business of working with people from the grassroots up? In due course, perhaps Ignatief arrived at Woodrow Wilson, as prolific a writer and academic as Ignatieff himself, professor and then President of Princeton University.
But even Woodrow Wilson had served as elected Governor of New Jersey (1911-1913). Though Wilson’s was a troubled presidency, still it was the closest precedent to hand. Michael Ignatieff meant to improve upon it… becoming Prime Minister of Canada without administrative, executive or foreign policy experience, having been elected just twice as a Member of Parliament… and without the most important thing of all: the proven ability to arouse, enthuse, lead the people.
That he should believe it is perfectly understandable; (people can after all persuade themselves about anything). That he got the leaders of the greatest of Canadian political parties to believe it is… remarkable, incredible, mad.
Yet that is precisely what happened when in 2004 three Liberal organizers, former Liberal candidate Alfred Apps, Ian Davey (son of Senator Keith Davey) and lawyer Daniel Brock traveled to Cambridge, Massachusetts (where Ignatieff held a professorship at Harvard) and persuaded him to move back to Canada and consider a bid for the Liberal leadership (should Paul Martin retire) and then Prime Minister. The tailors had done their work and now the Emperor with no clothes was ready for his unique, historic journey. Paul Martin did iretire the Liberal Party leadership after the Liberal government was defeated in the January 2006 federal election… and the poobahs of the defeated party were persuaded that no experience was the best experience… that no leadership skills were the best skills to lead… and that a man who so loved and venerated Canada that he sought every opportunity to leave her… that this was the best man in the nation to be Prime Minister of a great people.
Oh! Ignatieff!
But if the leaders of the Liberal Party (who ultimately anointed Ignatieff as their unproven paladin) believed Count Michael’s mythology, the people of Canada did not. They called it as they saw it, and they knew, like the unnamed boy in the fairy tale by Hans Christian Andersen, the emperor had no clothes, or anything else except the desire to start at the top, accepting obeisance. It was one of the most fatuous of political ideas ever perpetrated. And handed unprecedented victory to Conservative Stephen Harper. And unprecedented, abject defeat to the Liberals who forgot, with Ignatieff, the very heart of their principles: that governments are of the people, by the people, for the people… and of leaders who work a lifetime to understand those people and serve them.
As for Michael Ignatieff, who presided over the Liberal’s greatest, unprecedented defeat? He hinted he could be persuaded, if properly asked, to stay on as leader. No takers, there. And then he went before the nation and petulantly lambasted his opponents for questioning his attachment to Canada and his patriotism, still not understanding the rambunctious game of politics, a blood sport, not the coronation he expected. It was “their” fault Canadians were deprived of such a man as he. No doubt Count Michael will make his exhaustive case in his next book, which will be written anywhere else than the Canada he loves so much…
About the Author
Harvard-educated Dr. Jeffrey Lant is CEO of Worldprofit, Inc., providing a wide range of online services for small and-home based businesses. Dr. Lant is also the author of 18 best-selling business books. Republished with author’s permission by Howard Martell http://HomeProfitCoach.com. Check out Traffic Travis -> http://www.HomeProfitCoach.com/?rd=ni8UEiR5