Word: profs
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...writing in response to the news article “Star Ec Prof Caught in Academic Feud” (July 8), in which The Crimson portrays me as a school choice advocate in a “feud” with an assistant professor at Princeton named Jesse Rothstein. Actually, there is merely an intellectual discussion, and the Crimson should have reported about it rather than engaging in tabloid style journalism. Let me set the record straight...
...disappointed that the news article “Star Ec Prof Caught in Academic Feud” (July 8) on the debate between Harvard Professor Caroline M. Hoxby ’88 and Princeton Professor Jesse M. Rothstein ’95 focused so much on the personal aspects of the disagreement and so little on its scholarly impact which was the substantive nature of my conversation with Crimson reporter Javier C. Hernandez. This is not like the “cold fusion” debate of the 1980s in which a highly acclaimed finding, published in one paper...
...Janet see "a light over at the Frankenstein place," hundreds of lighters, flashlights and one small '50s table lamp illuminate the Eighth Street Playhouse. In Dr. Frank's old dark house, where Brad and Janet are seduced in turn by the extraterrestrial transvestite, they meet their old science prof Dr. Scott (Jonathan Adams) and in Washington the air is filled with streamers of Scott toilet paper. Frank (Tim Curry) proposes "a toast," and burnt toast pops up at a Chicago theater. At the end, when a betrayed Frank sings about "cards for sorrow, cards for pain," the cognoscenti in Berkeley...
...before alerting the police. Cops combed the bushes in search of Oppenheimer’s corpse. They finally found him fast asleep—in his own bed. The next day, newspapers on both sides of the Atlantic picked up on the story: “Forgetful Prof Parks Girl, Takes Self Home...
Moreover, it should be remembered that this allegation of plagiarism—made two decades after Prof. Tribe published his book—was borne out of enmity, used by a conservative writer in a partisan magazine to make political hay. Indeed, the most accurate analogue to Prof. Tribe in this case is the college student who mistakenly neglected to attribute certain quotations in a paper written many years earlier, only to have the oversight emerge years later as part of a deliberate effort to sully that student’s reputation. We have a sense that, in such...