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...however, is quoted by The New Yorker as saying that Perelman’s proof “was written in such a messy way” that it was incomprehensible. The Harvard professor is promoting another proof written by two of his protég??s—a Guangzhou, China-based mathematician and a Lehigh University professor. Yau and his protég??s say that their version—while influenced by Perelman—is a “self-contained and complete proof.” Perelman’s backers dispute that...
...Sultan Suleyman the Magnificent: Art, Architecture, and Ceremonial at the Ottoman Court.” The course name might be formidable, but the work isn’t; tests aren’t graded harshly and the workload is minor. Professor G??lru Necipoglu-Kafadar’s lectures tend toward disorganization, with lots of confusing slides, which makes the class boring but pretty easy. Speaking of slides, there’s B-21, “The Images of Alexander the Great.” The course is a legendary gut, and requires little actual work except...
Rubin worked at Goldman Sachs for 26 years, including two years as co-chairman of the firm, before leaving to join the Clinton administration in 1993. He served as Treasury secretary from 1995 to 1999—when he was succeeded by his protég?? Summers—and he then went to work for Goldman Sachs’ rival, Citigroup. Rubin joined Ford’s board of directors...
...Journal reported last week. Rubin worked at Goldman Sachs for 26 years, including two years as co-chairman of the firm, before leaving to join the Clinton administration in 1993. He served as Treasury secretary from 1995 to 1999—when he was succeeded by his protég?? Summers—and he then went to work for Goldman Sachs’ rival, Citigroup. Rubin joined Ford’s board of directors in 2000. “Citigroup’s multifaceted relationship with Ford could raise a question whether my relationship with Ford and Citigroup...
There's hope for Landis lovers inspired by his back-from-the brink tale: his guilt is far from established, and the case has other twists ahead. "It's going to be more complicated and longer than anybody thinks," says G??rard Dine, president of the Biotechnological Institute in Troyes, France, and an antidoping consultant to French and international sporting authorities. Phonak, the Swiss sponsor of Landis' cycling team, revealed last week that on the day of Landis' miraculous comeback, an abnormally high ratio of testosterone to epitestosterone was found in his urine. (Testosterone is a muscle-building anabolic steroid...