CONTACT US   SUBSCRIBE   PREMIUM   ADVERTISING

87F Hi 90F
Lo 72F

Recent Blog Posts

New Magazine Celebrates ‘the Harvard Brand'

By GABRIELLE BIRKNER, Staff Reporter of the Sun | September 27, 2006

Hundreds of "bright young things" and some of their older counterparts last night raised their glasses in honor of a new magazine celebrating Harvard University — America's pre-presidential playground, a cocoon for future billionaires, and the crown jewel of the Ivy League.

Guests sipped pomegranate martinis and nibbled on foie gras hors d'oeuvres at the Core Club in Midtown to fete the launch of 02138. A feature in the magazine's premiere issue identifies "The Harvard 100" — the school's most influential living alumni — and a number of the "100" were in attendance, including Fox News's Bill O'Reilly, constitutional scholar and New York University law professor Noah Feldman, and physicist Lisa Randall.

"I'll have to try harder next year," one partygoer, Oliver D. Cromwell, joked about not making the cut. An investment banker, Mr. Cromwell graduated from Harvard Business School in 1976.

An editorially independent magazine, each issue of which will celebrate "the Harvard brand," as one 02138 staffer put it, strikes a delicate balance between navel-gazing and Harvard-related current events coverage. Named for Harvard Square's zip code, the magazine includes a feature called "The Z-List is the New A-List," which describes the current Harvard admissions process as "an embarrassment of riches."The Harvard Corporation, what the magazine calls "a powerful, secretive governing board," gets a dramatic eight-page treatment, including an ominous illustration of seven darkened faces behind college windows.

There's also a piece about an alumna who photographs self-conscious adolescents, a back-of-the-book feature called "6 Degrees of Harvard," which this month links Katie Couric to Osama bin Laden via Harvard graduates, and a write-up about actor and producer Rashida Jones, whose photo also graces the magazine's cover.

"It runs against the expectation of what you'd expect to see in a magazine about Harvard," a co-founding editor, Daniel Loss, said. Mr. Loss, a 27-year-old graduate of Harvard College and Harvard Law School, founded the magazine with an undergraduate classmate, Bom Kim. The magazine has been in the works for two years.

The Boston-based publication, which has an editorial office in New York, has received $4 million from Atlantic Media, the parent company of Atlantic Monthly magazine, according to the New York Observer. The first two issues of the magazine will be distributed to some 50,000 alumni of the Cambridge, Mass.-based school. Editors said they have also be been fielding some subscription requests from those who have no affiliation with the school.

"There is a sensibility that many people in the Harvard community share, but that people outside the community might have as well," Mr. Loss, said. "There's an element of intellectual curiosity, of social impact, and personal ambition."


Reader comments on this article

TitleByDate

Pretentious and Just Bad [119 words]

Mary Ellen O'Brien 

Nov 13, 2006 16:36

Dog Days of Summer
A New York Sun Advertorial Section

NEW YORK ›

State's Rate of Surgical Infection Above National Average

Judge Rules for City on Search for September 11 Victim Remains

Billionaire Golisano To Spend $5M on Elections

Ex-Port Authority Chief Sees Possible Ground Zero Crimes

Bloomberg, Paterson Seek To Chart Unified Course

Lebanese Banks Accused of Aiding Hezbollah

NATIONAL ›

McCain Walks Tightrope on Immigration at Latino Conference

Dry, Hot Weather Threatens California Fire Gains

Questions Arise on Return of a Key Aide to McCain Campaign

Webb Rules Out Spot on Obama Ticket

Judge Rules Against Victims In 1983 Beirut Bombing

Poll: People Link Obama With 'Change,' McCain With 'Old'

ARTS+ ›

Billy Joel Pulls the Curtain at Shea

Fire Claims Vineyard Literary Landmark

'Trafic': When Tati Drove Himself to the Edge

'Full Battle Rattle': Knowing Is Half the Battle

Palladio, Architecture's Virgil

Beck Stumbles Into an Uncertain Future