Word: rosene
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...administration? Or is Woodward too close to his sources in the Bush administration to see the wider scenario at play?The latter charge has been levied at Woodward in the past month by such press gadflies as Frank Rich ’71, the New York Times columnist; Jay Rosen, former chair of the journalism department at New York University; and even Nora Ephron, Bernstein’s ex-wife.Also unclear is how much can be gleaned from Woodward’s comment about Novak’s source. Woodward is widely hailed for protecting the identity of his most famous...
...start thinking now about what sorts of actions that they need to take in the future.”Paik said the committee will also recommend methods of increasing support for gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender students from faculty, administrators, and advisers at the Law School.Committee member Brad E. Rosen said that he viewed the task force as a way of “opening up the dialogue” with the Law School and the University in preparing a response to the Supreme Court’s decision.He said the creation of a task force “emphasizes...
...dead. People come in but they don’t buy anything,” MacDonald said. This trend, with visitors choosing large chains over local shops, was in evidence at other retailers in the Square. At Tealuxe, a cafe and tea emporium, assistant manager Chris Rosen said that business in the cafe was going “pretty well, as well as expected. But shopping, not so much.” Starbucks employee Todd Denman, on the other hand, said that trade in the chain’s location in the Garage was “busier, much busier?...
...took Physics 55 or something for physics majors and Math 50-something for math majors,” he laughs, saying he quickly realized he wasn’t cut out for the work. Slamming his topology textbooks shut forever, Wolff went off to study music composition under Rosen Professor of Music Emeritus Leon Kirchner ’61. “It was the rigor of the musical training that attracted me [to composition],” Wolff says in a phone interview, citing Kirchner’s seminars as a highlight of his undergraduate career. But Wolff found...
...legal logjams have been cleared, few in the newsgathering business are pleased by the outcome. The murky sequence of events in the case tended to obscure the principles that journalists were trying to defend. "This case was a complete loser for the press," says Jay Rosen, chairman of New York University's school of journalism. "It exposed this traffic in secrets. And whenever the press is claiming rights that are an exception from the rest of the public, then I think it works against the press." --With reporting by Mike Allen/ Washington and Nathan Thornburgh/New York