Word: sandel
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Justice,” and Historical Studies B-61, “The Warren Court.” “John Cranley, then a law student, was a smart, energetic Justice TF, much appreciated by his students,” Bass Professor of Government Michael J. Sandel wrote in an e-mail. “I hope he pulls it off and wins election to Congress.” Franklin J. Leonard ’00, a student in one of Cranley’s Warren Court sections, even went on to work for his TF?...
...Drown...you’re Harry Elkins Widener! 4) Put together some writing, publish it once in awhile, and have nobody read it—you’re The Indy. 5) Get a white/gray wig and be a) Derek C. Bok b) Harvey C. Mansfield c) Michael J. Sandel or d) all of the above. 6) Smear on some duck shit and call yourself the Charles. 7) Go naked and be the allegorical Primal Scream. 8) Cover yourself in red paint and be a piece of buffalo chicken. 9) Get a gray ponytail...
...hope of favors yet to come” from her father, a Yale-educated oil magnate. When Anne Chandler Bass graduated in 2000, her father donated $7 million to Harvard—a gift that now pays the salary of Bass Professor of Government Michael J. Sandel. (The delicious irony—which goes unmentioned by Golden—is that this apparently-unjust admissions break is the source of the funding that facilitates Sandel’s wildly-popular course “Justice...
...convincingly, that some of the spots in our Harvard class are for sale—at a precious price. But, inadvertently, he also shows that legacy preference contributes to Harvard’s largess—and, hence, to our own well-being. Step into a class taught by Sandel or Bass Professor of English Louis Menand and you too are a beneficiary...
...Stuff of Thought,” was completed just last week and is scheduled to be published next year. The rest of his semester will go towards the preparation of journal articles and a grant proposal for the topics explored in his book. Bass Professor of Government Michael J. Sandel will also spend a good portion of his sabbatical at the keyboard. Sandel will pen two books—one related to the themes presented in his course on ethics and biotechnology, which he taught with Cabot Professor of the Natural Sciences Douglas Melton, and another on markets and morals...