Please Note:
This profile was automatically generated using 1 reference found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
This profile was automatically generated using 1 reference found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
Employment History
View...Board Membership and Affiliations
View...Web References
-
1. The Harvard Crimson Online :: News
www.thecrimson.com/article.asp - [Cached]Published on: 4/8/2003 Last Visited: 4/8/2003
Edward P. Chen '01, entrepreneur, stock trader and an "ebullient" former Kirkland House resident died of a fall in California on Mar. 18. He was 23.
Friends said that medication Chen was taking for bipolar disorder may have affected his balance and contributed to his fatal fall from a 150-ft. cliff near Carmel, Calif.
Friends remember Chen for being outgoing and kind-spirited, and say they were shocked to hear of his illness and death.
"He was one of those people who brightens your day," said Amy Chen '01, who was not related to Edward Chen.
...
Kirkland House Master Tom Conley said Chen was an "ebullient" member of the House and "liked to talk about everything from physics and letters to baseball."
"He loved life," Conley said.
Chen suffered a nervous breakdown in January and spent several weeks in the hospital.
He recovered enough to return to his job as a financial analyst for Intel Corporation in March, friends said.
Before returning to work, he joined his parents on a family vacation to visit cousins in Oregon.
On the return drive to his home in San Jose, he stopped at a scenic lookout overlooking the Pacific Ocean near Carmel.
His body was found at the foot of the cliff.
His camera case, which was found in his car, was empty, suggesting to friends and family that he might have stopped to take a photograph of the view.
Chen, an economics concentrator, started a company called BizTech Enterprizes while at Harvard.
...
Encouraged by his successful investment of a gift of money given to him by his parents upon graduating from high school, Chen applied his money-managing talents to his company.
The company provided investment services and educational consulting.
When after-school programs in his hometown of Holmdel, N.J. were threat ened, Chen offered his company's services to support them.
Despite the time he gave to running BizTech and managing his personal portfolio, Chen played an active role in Harvard Model Congress while at Harvard.
He joined the organization during his first year and rose through the ranks, running committees and eventually holding the position of expert witness and senior staffer, said Amy Chen.

