Word: rosenberg
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...This year we had a lot of new freshmen who felt alienated when they realized Harvard was no feminist haven,” adds Jessica M. Rosenberg ’04, the publicity chair...
...fielded calls from the media asking about the Miss Harvard pageant, for example, but I didn’t even know anything about it,” publicity chair Rosenberg says...
DIED. WILLIAM ROSENBERG, 86, founder of America's favorite guilty pleasure, Dunkin' Donuts; in Mashpee, Mass. After World War II, he began serving coffee and pastries to factory workers from a mobile canteen. The business grew into the world's largest baked-goods and coffee chain, with 5,000 outlets and more than 50 varieties of doughnuts...
...been dragging its feet on the anthrax investigation? One person who thinks so is Barbara Hatch Rosenberg, a bioweapons expert at the Federation of American Scientists who has become a public thorn in the agency's side. There has been a likely suspect for months, she claims, yet the FBI has not made an arrest. Without naming the suspect, she says he has received the anthrax vaccine, has a job that involves devising bioterror scenarios and once worked for the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases at Fort Detrick, Md. That facility works with the Ames strain...
Last week FBI agents searched the Frederick, Md., apartment and Ocala, Fla., storage facility of Steven Hatfill, 48, a biodefense scientist who seems to match Rosenberg's profile. According to former colleagues, Hatfill has been vaccinated for anthrax, worked for the Army institute from 1997 to '99, and last summer--in a potentially fatal blow to his career--lost his government security clearance. Moreover, in 1999 Hatfill commissioned a study of a hypothetical terrorist attack in which anthrax is sent through the mail. He has another odd link to the case: the anthrax-filled letters sent to Senators Patrick Leahy...