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...studied English at the University of Pennsylvania and Philip Roth was one of your professors. Wasn't law school a snore after that? No, law school was fantastic! I loved law school. I teach law now at Penn; I teach a course that I developed called Justice and Fiction. Law school is the most academically rigorous environment I've ever been in, and I just love that. The bottom line is, what you're talking about in law school is "What is justice?" That's what I'm writing about, too. What is right and wrong? What I like about...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Novelist Lisa Scottoline | 4/13/2009 | See Source »

Last month, Philip D. Broughton, a HBS alumnus, wrote an article for London’s Sunday Times entitled “Harvard’s masters of the apocalypse.” Harvard Business Review has published several blog posts on this issue, including one titled, “Are MBAs the Problem...

Author: By William N. White, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Harvard Business School Evaluates Past Performance | 4/9/2009 | See Source »

...since the opening of Fiorucci on East 59th Street in the 1970s or Reminiscence on MacDougal Street in the 1980s has a fast-fashion retail brand made such a splash in Manhattan. On Thursday morning the model Kate Moss will join Arcadia Group chairman Sir Philip Green to cut the ribbon on British retail chain Topshop's long-awaited U.S. debut, at Broadway and Broome Street in SoHo. Originally scheduled to hit the Big Apple last fall, the delayed flagship opening comes at a time when other relatively inexpensive fashion brands like H&M and Zara are reporting declining sales...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Look Out, H&M. Britain's Topshop Invades New York | 4/1/2009 | See Source »

...Ultimately it was Philip Hilder—the lawyer who had represented the Enron whistleblower Sherron Watkins in Congressional hearings following the company’s collapse—who secured the settlement from Harvard...

Author: By Peter F. Zhu, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: HMC Analyst Questions Dismissal | 3/31/2009 | See Source »

...scale of our land, our population, our natural resources. China has similar advantages today, and partly because we have already been there and done that, paving the way, it has been able to develop in fast motion, cramming 100 years of development into 30. But I'm reminded of Philip Johnson's apt, bitchy description of Frank Lloyd Wright during the forward looking 1930s "as the greatest architect of the 19th century." Twenty-first century China is the greatest country of the 20th century. Muscular industrialism gets you only so far. Further increases in productivity and prosperity require ingenuity...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The End of Excess: Is This Crisis Good for America? | 3/26/2009 | See Source »

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