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In appointing professors to tenured positions, Harvard conducts nationwide - and, in many cases, worldwide - searches to identify men and women who are the leading scholars and teachers in their fields. Although the process leading to tenured appointments varies from School to School, in each case the final appointment is subject to approval by the President and the Governing Boards of the University.

About 1746, John Winthrop - Harvard's Hollis Professor of Mathematics and Natural Philosophy, and its first important faculty scientist - delivered experimental lectures on electricity. Winthrop holds the distinction of operating the country's first experimental- physics laboratory. About 1755, Winthrop gave two lectures on seismology after the Lisbon earthquake. By explaining earthquakes as natural phenomena rather than as emblems of divine discontent, Winthrop raised many a disapproving minister's brow.

 

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