Word: nozick
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Professor of Philosophy Robert Nozick is working with the Public Broadcasting Service to develop a talk show on morals and ethics which he would host. Nozick said last week...
...semester after a year in dry dock. Other favorites include: Fine Arts 175a ("Bricks for Dicks") and Literature and Arts C-14. "The Concept of the Hero in Hellenic Civilization," ("Heroes for Zeroes"). What promises to be this year's recording-breaking chart-topper among new offerings, philosopher Robert Nozick's Phil 25, "The Best Things in Life," hasn't yet acquired an official yuck-it-up title. "Pleasure" and "Ice Cream" are top contenders...
...other faculties--most notably at the Law School--also earn the University maximum, says Melissa Gerrity, associate dean for financial affairs. But in Arts and Sciences, financial officials place the next highest '82-'83 salary at $65,000. That fee will reportedly be garnered by libertarian philosopher Robert Nozick at 41 years old a comparatively young Faculty member. Moreover, Nozick received tenure at Harvard relatively recently, in 1969. After Nozick, officials say, tenured Faculty salaries next year will range down to $34,500, with a heavy concentration of professors earning salaries in the $40,000s...
...Nozick, like the rest of the Faculty, will not officially learn his next year's salary until the dean's office mails out a stack of letters on June 30. A Faculty member who wishes to learn his '82-'83 salary before then--to include it in a grant proposal, for instance--must obtain special permission directly from Rosovsky, financial officials say. If, for some reason, a professor calls the dean's office to check on the figure for his current salary, the office will hang up and ring him back, to make sure the call did not come from...
...Phyllis Keller. But no such scale exists for tenured Faculty members, all of whose salaries Rosovsky determines on an individual basis. Administrators are stingy about the statistics they will reveal about full professors' salaries, but they insist that those figures are also mostly a function of age and experience, Nozick's case apparently notwithstanding...