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Word: hiphop (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 2000-2009
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...return to Cambridge in a tenured role. In September 2004, just months after Summers turned down Morgan’s tenure case, she and Bobo announced their joint departure for the West Coast, where job offers awaited them at Stanford.Morgan became the executive director of Stanford’s Hiphop Archive and an associate professor of communication. At Stanford, an associate professorship is a tenured position. Bobo assumed Stanford’s Martin Luther King Jr. Centennial Professorship and became director of the school’s Af-Am program as well as its Center for Comparative Studies in Race...

Author: By Lulu Zhou, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Af-Am Seeks To Lure 2 Ex-Profs | 12/14/2006 | See Source »

...Prudence Carter`s Sociology 60, “Sociology of Race and Ethnicity.” The former’s pop-cultury material is accessible to anyone who resides outside of a cave and Kaufmann`s opinionated rants, outlandish personality, and penchant for underground hiphop make lectures worth attending. Carter is famous for being a better adviser than she is lecturer, but the class offers an interesting perspective on a difficult problem. Inexplicably (or, perhaps, rather explicably), the number of sociology concentrators in the class of 2008 is about half that of the class of 2007.  Nevertheless...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Sociology | 9/14/2006 | See Source »

...Kern winners of the 1930s to ?It?s Hard Out Here for a Pimp? this year. But, hell, the competition comprised of a woozy liturgical ballad from Crash and an uptempo number from the bottom of the Dolly Parton song trunk. And the winners, three exponents of Memphis hiphop, expressed more astonished delight than anyone except the Crash crowd. One of them even thanked the Oscar show?s executive producer, Gil Cates. That guy?ll be invited back, even if his dude duds obliterated the dress code...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: 'Crash' Is King | 3/6/2006 | See Source »

...Herren returns to the sharp, intricate rhythm collages that made him famous. “Security Screenings” builds its songs on looped samples, delicately intermeshed beats, and electronic flourishes, dipping in and out of new modes with each bar. The result carries both the heft of hiphop and the prettiness of indie electronic. The effect of this fusion can be disorienting, but in a way disorientation is precisely the point: in the opening track, “The Letter: P,” Herren sets up a snatch of movie dialogue, only to undermine and distort the voices...

Author: By Catherine L. Tung, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Security Screenings | 2/15/2006 | See Source »

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