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...long ago, a boxed DVD set of the 1980s yuppie-hit TV show thirtysomething showed up in the mail. My wife, who was suffering a bout of nostalgia, had bought it, I guess, as a way to punish my oldest two daughters, who were heading off to college. She claimed she wanted to show them what life was like when they were born...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Projecting a Better Image | 10/15/2009 | See Source »

...first astonished, then outraged, and finally saddened by The Harvard Crimson’s story of September 29 about e-mail messages to Harvard College students from a former graduate student in the Economics Department. It is hard for me to believe that anyone who reads these e-mails, or the former student’s blog, will take the allegations they contain as seriously as The Crimson seems...

Author: By John Y. Campbell | Title: LETTERS—EC GRAD STUDENT E-MAILS | 10/15/2009 | See Source »

Readers of The Crimson should know that Professor Kenneth Rogoff, a particular target of the e-mails, has handled this matter with consummate professionalism, consulting the university administration at every stage. The e-mail from Professor Rogoff quoted in the Crimson story used text suggested to him by GSAS administrators. Deans Michael Smith and Allan Brandt have expressed their strong support in a recent letter to Professor Rogoff, which states “the allegations about your conduct, described in the article and the mounting mass emails, were without any substance” and concludes...

Author: By John Y. Campbell | Title: LETTERS—EC GRAD STUDENT E-MAILS | 10/15/2009 | See Source »

Although sustainability and paper reduction may seem like the most obvious driving forces behind the project, Paul also contends that postering is simply not effective. In an e-mail to Harvard Resource Efficiency Program leaders, he wrote...

Author: By H. Zane B. Wruble | Title: Posters Be Gone? | 10/14/2009 | See Source »

...There is conflicting information on just how far Hicheur's plans had progressed. The London Daily Mail reported on Tuesday that Hicheur had targeted an oil refinery owned by the French company Total and wanted to create an explosion capable of destroying a "city the size of London," according to unidentified sources. The French official would not comment on the Daily Mail report but did say that Hicheur "had some written projects and drawings concerning certain targets in France." The official added, however, that Hicheur "had not gotten close to defining a plot." (Read "French Terror Conviction: Lesson...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: How a French Physicist Became a Terrorism Suspect | 10/14/2009 | See Source »

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