Word: rosenberg
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...expect a call from your class agent, asking for money. Don't feel too guilty if you politely refuse, though, because the alumni office says it understands that recent grads are just beginning their careers and might not have as much money to part with, according to Robert A. Rosenberg, development office official. Five years out of school, however, the big push begins with a class reunion. This serves to bring students back to Cambridge, reminding them that they will soon be the older influential alumni they've heard so much about. From then on reunions occur every five years...
...more fascinated by tests and procedures than by the human beings they treat. Medical school deans and faculty members, meanwhile, worry about turning out narrow-minded, unenthusiastic graduates who have little perspective on the facts they have swallowed. After conducting a survey at Stanford, Medical Professor Saul Rosenberg concluded that medical students are widely perceived as "aggressive, competitive, narrow, dishonest, unfriendly individuals, in other words, nerds...
DIED. Anna Rosenberg Hoffman, 81, strong-willed labor and manpower expert and adviser to Presidents, who from 1950 to 1953 was an Assistant Secretary of Defense, the highest Pentagon post ever held by a woman; of pneumonia; in New York City. Born in Budapest, reared in New York City, she blended toughness with soft-voiced charm and a dash of flamboyance in her many public posts. Hoffman dramatized her role as a mediator during a 1930s New York City electricians' strike by donning hip boots and descending into a subway tunnel. Awarded the Medal of Freedom...
Sophomore Tracy Kunichika also turned in a strong performance, reversing last week's loss to Yale to defeat the Tiger's Robin Rosenberg in straight sets...
Although most of Bok's points are not new, they are all the more forceful because of his position and the occasion he chose for airing them. Maurice Rosenberg, professor of procedural law at Columbia University and a former official in the Carter Administration, suggests that the increase in litigation and in the complexity of the law is due partly to greater public awareness of rights and a willingness to try them out in court. "That," says Rosenberg, "is certainly preferable to having them tested in the streets." Rosenberg agrees with Bok, however, that "law schools should do more...