Word: globe
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...riveting novels. “He makes us care by means of the detail that he lavishes on the drama,” reviewer Christopher Lehmann-Haupt wrote in The New York Times. In recent years, McClintick’s investigative interests have led him to scandals across the globe, from drug trafficking in Colombia to bank bribery in France.“You look for stories that transcend their setting,” McClintick says. “People want to read about real people who are in difficult situations that they can identify with....You can really...
...academic programs as well as the expansion into Allston.The most high-profile Harvard insider whose name has been mentioned is Corporation member Nannerl O. Keohane, a former president of Duke University and Wellesley College and a member of the presidential search committee.Keohane, however, told The Boston Globe in March that she is “not available” for Harvard’s top job.“I want to tell people to please stop putting me on the lists of potential candidates,” she said then.But unlike the corporate world, most successful candidates for university...
...That weekend, The Crimson identified more than a dozen such passages. “Opal Mehta” and its author were suddenly propelled back into the national media spotlight. The plagiarism controversy made the front page of the Times and was the top story in The Boston Globe. NBC’s Today Show, CNN, and newspapers from Great Britain to India covered the story concerning these similar passages in the three “chick-lit” books.When The Crimson initially asked Viswanathan about her novel’s similarities with “Sloppy Firsts?...
...that it was going to be just 12 episodes and out.”Cuse says that the success of “Lost,” both in ratings and in critical approbation—he won an Emmy in 2005 for best drama series and a Golden Globe in 2006 for the same category—has been “utterly shocking.”“It’s kind of surreal,” he says.The show, a drama about a group of plane-crash survivors who end up on a seemingly deserted...
...that all changed one day, when I began to realize just how amazing some of my experiences here have been. I remembered working on a research paper for my history class and realizing that the author of my primary source lived on campus. I remembered opening the Boston Globe and seeing the face of one of my closest friends on the cover of the living section. And I remembered a casual conversation with my roommate about the Brad Pitt/Angelina Jolie/Jennifer Aniston love triangle morphing into an intense intellectual debate that included historical allusions and referenced primary sources. At that point...