Word: publishings
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...cyberlaw expert and incoming head of the Law School Library. The policy, optional for the moment, will become mandatory in September. In the past, some faculty members have expressed concerns that open access to articles would adversely affect academic journals, and thus reduce opportunities for younger scholars to be published. But Kagan emphasized that the Law School faculty was united in supporting the decision. “The view was that legal scholarship will only be enhanced by wider distribution and the potential for greater influence that comes with it,” Kagan said in an e-mailed statement...
...researchers started to work on the bone, and last year, they were able to publish a small set of sequences from the collagen protein...
...Weitz, who is co-directing the BASF Advanced Research Initiative. “The industry is a wonderful place to find and work on more problems that could make a difference for humanity.” Weitz said that Harvard faculty will retain the right to distribute and publish research conducted during the five years, and BASF will have the opportunity to take the findings to a commercial level. Jens Rieger, a researcher at BASF who will be co-directing the initiative with Weitz, cited the collaborative nature of this university-industry relationship as a unique strength. Unlike most corporations...
...wouldn't want to live in Meyer's next book. Her fourth Twilight novel, Breaking Dawn, will be out in August--it's already No. 8 on Amazon.com--but on May 6 she will publish The Host (Little, Brown; 619 pages), a science-fiction novel being marketed to adults. It's set in the near future on an Earth that has been conquered by parasitic aliens who take over the bodies of humans, annihilating their hosts' personalities. One human host resists; she lives on as a voice in the head she shares with the alien. When host and parasite...
...their mouth shut about the proletariat.At any rate, current students seem to have forfeited Marx and Engels to an even greater degree than their instructors. When, in 1953, Crimson editors got hold of the Ibis that sits atop a certain semi-secret Sorrento Square organization that used to occasionally publish a humor magazine, the natural decision was to send it to the Soviet Union. Who knows what nemesis state would even have it today, or whether we’d have the cajones to send it to them? Kim Jong-Il would probably like it, but he seems like small...