Word: feudã
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Lorand Matory ’82—a former professor at Harvard with whom Dershowitz had a long and well-publicized feud??seemed to express some philosophical support for his former colleague. Matory is now the chair of the African and African American Studies department at Duke University...
...skills at guessing what common items are found in a woman’s purse. Jambaldorj, who is also on The Crimson’s business board, highlighted her Mongolian heritage and her bubbly personality. And Henderson, an Oklahoma native, put on an accent and a cowboy hat. Family Feud??s casting coordinator, Bridget Goodbody, said that the show was looking for a team that represented Harvard well. “All of our team members have wonderful personalities that really stood out in their videos,” she said. The team will spend the next...
...made an excellent point: in the ongoing “clash of values” between Massachusetts and the Catholic Church over adoption by gays and lesbians: the interests of the State’s vulnerable children in need of adoption—the silent third party to this feud??should not be overlooked. Nevertheless, I write to point out a course of action the piece’s authors overlooked—one that would allow the state to avoid this dilemma altogether. Massachusetts could amend its tax laws to revoke the favored tax status of private...
...writing in response to the news article “Star Ec Prof Caught in Academic Feud?? (July 8), in which The Crimson portrays me as a school choice advocate in a “feud?? with an assistant professor at Princeton named Jesse Rothstein. Actually, there is merely an intellectual discussion, and the Crimson should have reported about it rather than engaging in tabloid style journalism. Let me set the record straight...
...disappointed that the news article “Star Ec Prof Caught in Academic Feud?? (July 8) on the debate between Harvard Professor Caroline M. Hoxby ’88 and Princeton Professor Jesse M. Rothstein ’95 focused so much on the personal aspects of the disagreement and so little on its scholarly impact which was the substantive nature of my conversation with Crimson reporter Javier C. Hernandez. This is not like the “cold fusion” debate of the 1980s in which a highly acclaimed finding, published in one paper...