Word: prof
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...whisper about your prof behind his back, bash her anonymously on a blog, but you have to admit it takes balls to attach your name to an article slamming him in a national publication. Ross Douthat ’02 calls out specific Harvard professors in “The Truth About Harvard,” an article in the March Atlantic Monthly that zeroes in on Harvard’s Core courses as inconsequential, calling them “maddeningly specific and often defiantly obscure...
Even if the registrar refuses Lewis’s plan, students such as Samuel W. Teller ’08 are already inspired to explore the endless realm of technological possibilities taught in the class. “I don’t care whether Prof. Lewis gives us Google or a Sicilian battle hammer for the final, because by the end of Bits I’m going to know how to build my own final-taking robot from scratch,” Teller wrote in an e-mail. “I’m going to name...
...Best of the Bloggers For expertise in the nuances of Iraqi politics, it's hard to beat Michigan University History Professor Juan Cole's Informed Comment. Prof. Cole is widely acknowledged as one of America's leading authorities on Shiite religious and political culture, and his proficiency in Arabic allows him to follow much of the political debate occurring among Iraqi leaders through Arab media outlets. His daily updates are essential reading for anyone seeking serious analysis on Iraq. War in Context, a dovish Web log provides an essential service by posting a daily menu of essential reading from...
...Prof. Katz, who says he checks on the implementation of his committee’s recommendations by reading annual reports such the OHR’s, praises the administration for “doing what they said they are going to do” —implementing the wage parity policy...
...totals about $250 million (one-thirtieth the amount in Iraq). There have been approximately 70,000 Darfurians killed by acts of genocide since April (70 times the number in Iraq—and this doesn’t even count the number of deaths from the forced starvation, which Prof. Alex de Waal of Harvard’s Global Equity Initiative estimates to be in the 100,000-350,000 range). Yesterday, 3,000 troops from the African Union arrived in Darfur (they are authorized to only to monitor, not intervene to stop the killing). Until yesterday, Darfurians had only...