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Harold W. McGraw, Jr.
Chairman Emeritus
The McGraw-Hill Companies
Born in New York City, he graduated from Princeton University
in 1940, served as a captain in the Army Air Corps in World
War II, and then worked in the advertising agency and book
retailing fields before joining McGraw-Hill as a sales representative
in its Book Company in 1947. He has held many publishing responsibilities
in his over fifty years with the firm, becoming president
of the McGraw-Hill Book Company in 1968, and then president
of the parent corporation, McGraw-Hill, Inc., its chief executive
officer, and chairman of the Board. In 1988, having reached
the Board retirement age of seventy, he officially retired,
but the Board elected him chairman emeritus. Mr. McGraw also
served as a director on two other corporate Boards, CPC International
Inc., and the Schering-Plough Corporation.
Among his civic activities, he founded the Business Council
for Effective Literacy in 1983 and was its president for the
subsequent decade. He also founded The Business Press Educational
Foundation in 1984. Some of his other civic activities have
included The New York Public Library, the Council for Aid
to Education, the International Center for the Disabled, the
Princeton University Press, and the Barbara Bush Foundation
for Family Literacy.
Among honors received was the nations highest literacy
award presented to him in 1990 by President Bush at the White
House. He has also been awarded honorary degrees by the Graduate
School of the City University of New York, by Ohio University,
by Princeton University, by Pine Manor College, by Fairfield
University, by Hofstra University, and by Marymount Manhattan
College. He also received the Cleveland E. Dodge Medal for
Distinguished Service to Education from Columbia Universitys
Teachers College.
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