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Word: kazhdan (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1980-1989
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Usage:

...wear a helmet because I don't plan to fall," says Eli Kazhdan...

Author: By Abigail N. Sosland, | Title: Harvard Bicyclists Break Away From the Rules | 2/26/1988 | See Source »

...think that Gorbachev has something up hissleeve," said Eli Kazhdan '91, another formerrefusenik, "Premiers in Russia don't get theirpositions by being nice guys...

Author: By Jonathan S. Cohn, WIRE DISPATCHES | Title: 60,000 Protest Refusenik Policy In D.C. March | 12/7/1987 | See Source »

...pages, which according to Artin, is unusually concise for a through mathematical proof. As a result the mathematicians had to go back to Faltings' original sources to double check the professor's work. But after the meetings, all the mathematicians agreed that Faltings' work is "strikingly foolproof." David Kazhdan, Professor of Mathematics said last week...

Author: By Rebecca J. Joseph, | Title: Harvard, MIT Math Professors Agree That Theorem is Valid | 7/29/1983 | See Source »

Though anti-Semitism and other political considerations kept both Kazhdan and Bernstein from any status higher than researcher in the Soviet Union--Kazhdan says he "didn't even try" to become a professor in a Russian university--both had already achieved international academic recognition through their publications. Attaining such recognition may be easier for mathematicians than for scholars is other fields, Kazhdan speculates, because mathematics "depends less than any other on language and technology." About 100 Soviet refugees are affiliated with math departments in various American universities, he notes...

Author: By Bonnie Salomon, | Title: Coming Home | 6/9/1983 | See Source »

...linguistic and cultural gap does cause problems in other areas, however Kazhdan notes, for example, that despite the substantial Soviet population at Harvard, the area lacks a strong refugee community. Mark Kuchnent, a Russian Jew who is currently a researcher in Soviet science and policy at the Russian Research Center, concurs that "there is no organized Soviet community of immigrants." Harvard does, however, have a comparatively large foreign community because dissidents tend to emigrate to large cities such as New York or Boston, although "there's no rhyme or reason to which university gets people," according to Jonathan Sanders, assistant...

Author: By Bonnie Salomon, | Title: Coming Home | 6/9/1983 | See Source »

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