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...last Friday’s Crimson, the names of two letter writers were accidentally switched due to a production error. The letter “No Grounds to Question Duke Lacrosse Players’ Character” attributed to Leah M. Littman and Tracy E. Nowski was actually written by Joshua A. Barro and the letter “Portrayal of Rape Ignores Statistics and Misses Nuance” attributed to Joshua A. Barro was actually written by Leah M. Litman and Tracy E. Nowski. The letters with their correct authors are reprinted below. The Crimson apologizes to the letter...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Correction | 4/22/2007 | See Source »

CORRECTION In this Friday's Crimson, the names of two letter writers were accidentally switched due to a production error. The letter "No Grounds to Question Duke Lacrosse Players' Character" attributed to Leah M. Littman and Tracy E. Nowski was actually written by Joshua A. Barro and the letter "Portrayal of Rape Ignores Statistics and Misses Nuance" attributed to Joshua A. Barro was actually written by Leah M. Litman and Tracy E. Nowski. The Crimson apologizes to the letter writers and its readers for this serious mistake...

Author: By Joshua A. Barro, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: No Grounds To Question Duke Lacrosse Players’ Character | 4/20/2007 | See Source »

...post debate analysis on the Team Zebra blog (the second blog in Harvard’s emergent “blogosphere”), Leah Littman ’06 declared Banerji, a fellow Team Zebra blogger, “to be the winner of the Presidential debate” and called “a close tie” between Lee and Riley for the “winner of the VP debate.” While I applaud Banerji and Lee on their awards, let’s hope that, in the future, clumsy moderators concede a touch...

Author: By Michael B. Broukhim | Title: The Richie and Steve Show | 12/1/2005 | See Source »

Bruckheimer's first few attempts at television were disastrous. Dangerous Minds (1996) made the classic mistake of trying too hard to mimic its film progenitor, and Soldier of Fortune, Inc. (1997) finally overestimated America's interest in killing foreigners. Then he hired Jonathan Littman, the Fox executive who oversaw The X-Files and Beverly Hills, 90210, to run his TV company and instructed him to develop a show about a crime-scene-investigation lab. "We basically said we wanted to make Quincy for people who don't need an oxygen mask," Littman says. "We go into the body, making...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Jerry Bruckheimer: TV's Top Gun | 5/5/2003 | See Source »

...course, this assumes people watch (Diaries started taping in January; Profiles hasn't begun yet). If the war flares up, the cameras may not get access to the front. But Jonathan Littman, president of Bruckheimer's TV-production company, says it doesn't matter: "Just because [soldiers] aren't firing guns doesn't mean what they're doing isn't interesting." With luck, there will not be hostile fire in the troops' future. But there will definitely be shooting...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Mediawatch: That's Militainment! | 3/4/2002 | See Source »

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