Word: commenters
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...School officials—including Kagan and Minow—did not respond to requests for comment last evening. But Petrie Professor of Law Einer R. Elhauge ’82 said the century-old first-year curriculum covering traditional common law topics—contracts, torts, property, civil procedure, and criminal law—will be constricted, and courses on policy (“Legislation and Regulation”) and international law (“International Law and Problems and Theories”) will be added...
...said. “The criminal process should be the last way to resolve a dispute.”The man who negotiated this out-of-court settlement finds himself often presiding over the cases of Harvard students. The district attorney’s office would not comment on the rationale behind Sprague’s decision, but the judge’s undergraduate experience at the College might shed light on his views.A BLUE-BLOOD CRIMSONITETed McKinney ’60, who lived a floor above the judge during their freshman year, said Sprague was a focused student with...
...editors: Re: “The Dungeon on Dunster Street,” comment, Oct. 3. It’s true. The Core office has stolen the soul of liberal arts from Harvard. It’s true that it can be a bureaucracy marked by arrogance in its personnel and inflexibility in its policy. It’s all true. The Core is, in a word, evil. Still, this need not be cause for despair and lamentation. Sure, they’re annoying. But have you noticed that they’re all the way over there on Dunster...
Reached on his cell phone last night, Haddock said he hadn’t read the report yet and couldn’t comment...
...buoyant grades at Yale, the Prince reports that grade-capped Princeton students are (surprise!) not happy with their deflated GPAs. Specifically, 75 percent told the student government that Princeton's grade-deflation policy is having a "negative effect on the University's academic environment." This is from an anoymous comment on the survey: "My grades are much lower than those of my friends from other schools. Why would an employer hire a Princeton grad with a [GPA of] 3.5 instead of a Harvard grad with a [GPA of] 3.8? Are we arrogant enough to believe grades from Princeton mean something...