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...submitting the best predictions for how the 65 teams in the NCAA’s annual basketball tournament will fare. Osburn’s statement from last week generated heated discussion among NCAA members, Harvard Assistant Director of Athletics Nathan T. Fry wrote in an e-mail yesterday. He urged the NCAA to develop a firm policy regarding Facebook. “The NCAA needs to take a hard look at how these pools affect college sports, if at all, and make a definitive ruling on their permissibility,” he wrote. “If there?...
...said Avanessian, a student at Harvard Law School. “They are doing this to gay men, to women, and it’s just awful.” The postings, which attacked several other students in addition to Avanessian, prompted Law School Dean Elena Kagan to e-mail the student body yesterday exhorting students not to join the discussions. “I hope all of you will act with professionalism, and of course with simple decency, in turning your backs on this new and highly efficient mechanism for malicious gossip,” Kagan wrote. The site...
...e-mail, Sampson notes that the appointment of Tim Griffin to a U.S. attorney slot in Little Rock, "was important to Harriet [Miers], Karl [Rove], etc." In response, Democrats said they would investigate the "etc." - to discover which persons at the White House or DOJ he might have been referring...
...itself of underperforming students during Anderson's tenure from 2002 to 2005 and perhaps beyond, by using tactics including listing dropouts as out-of-state transfers. The school district is currently investigating the matter. Anderson did not respond to requests for an interview, but denied any wrongdoing in an e-mail: "My philosophy was to make all decisions in the best interests of the students we served." Anderson now consults to the school district and heads a dropout prevention program - an ironic choice, if the allegations prove to be correct...
...returned home to discover my family in a similar state of pique. My sister-in-law sat behind her laptop, sending off an e-mail petition against the film to half of Tehran, while my husband leafed through a book on the Achaemenid Empire, noting that Herodotus had estimated the Persian army at 120,000 men, not one million as the film claimed. The morning newspaper lay on the table with the headline "300 AGAINST 70 MILLION!" (the population of the country). It was echoed by the evening news: "Hollywood has opened a new front in the war against Iran...