Word: studiesã
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...above-the-fold obit: "A man of the Times." Apple was chairman of the Prince in 1956, but just briefly. Poor grades got him kicked out of Princeton for a second time, and he never returned. (Apple eventually picked up his BA from Columbia's School of General Studies??which, according to this Spectator article, appears to be a haven for dropouts.) But the Prince dregs up what it can of Apple's time on campus, spent almost exclusively in the Prince building. The obit recounts how Apple's aggressive chops got him—and the Prince?...
Because the course, an introduction to cinematic style and aesthetics, is a requirement for Visual and Environmental Studies?? Film Studies track, all concentrators who entered the lottery were accepted into the class...
...advertisements and educational promotion; the “thought leaders” among physicians are paid to lecture and influence; academics further work mightily to expand a disease concept to include greater application of product; emoluments are funneled to favored physicians to perform pseudo-research “seeding studies?? to introduce prescription momentum into communities, and finally, platoons of sales agents (90,000 currently) arrive with catered lunches in physicians’ offices, carrying loads of starter samples. There’s nothing surprising here. That’s the way it works, and it produces marvelous...
...Despite being the fifth largest concentration, it still suffers from a lack of faculty and funding (maybe that’s why it’s still banished to the Quad). You’ll never meet the famous profs who supposedly belong to the committee that steers Social Studies??the Michael Sandel’s and company. Actually you probably won’t know they’re on the steering committee or that there is even a steering committee. For all practical purposes, Anya Bernstein (the Dean of Undergraduate Studies) is the face of Social...
...Harvard-sponsored cultural tourism is not for everyone. Our letters were singularly unsuccessful in getting us first-row places at the large open-air concerts held in Paris over the summer. Nightclubs and first-class travel compartments are similarly indifferent to the enthusiastic words of the Center for European Studies?? executive director. More importantly, to participate in this Harvardian opportunity, one must be able to take pleasure in the gloriously pompous and refined traditions of France, such as the subtle art of formal letter-writing and the oligarchic conviction that true science can only be accomplished within damask...