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HARVARD REVIEW

Harvard Review
The Harvard Review returned my poems yesterday. I'm just not Ivy League material, I guess. But I did receive a nifty blank Harvard Review postcard and if you're lucky I just may send it to you! Tomorrow is the Book Awards. Yes indeed
2006 Chicago Books in Review: Nonfiction
Plus, check back next week for Veronica Bond's year-end review of fiction by Chicago authors. First in Violence, Deepest in Dirt: Homicide in Chicago, 1875-1920 by Jeffrey S. Adler (Harvard University Press, 367 pages)
Applying MoneyLaw principles to scholarly works
And speaking of Herbert Wechsler, revulsion toward invited pieces would surely counsel a less prominent place on Wechsler's résumé for that piece he wrote upon the invitation of the Harvard Law Review, The Supreme Court, October Term
One Leadership Style Doesn't Fit All Law Firms
You can read more about “The Tools of Cooperation and Change” in the October 2006 issue of Harvard Business Review, where the authors noted: “One of the rarest managerial skills is the ability to understand which tools will work in a
Adams Fall by Sean Desmond
Desmond capitalized on Adams House’s own ghost-and-myth-filled history to create a creepy backdrop for his story of a student’s descent into madness. Here's Amazon's review:. Harvard's Adams House has a checkered past--ghosts in the
Review: The Popularisation of the Hacker Ethic
of Intellectual Property rights through the theft of music. […] Seite 16 ff. Notes. Wark, McKenzie, A Hacker Manifesto, Harvard University Press, Massachusetts, 2004. Tags: Hacking Darknet Hacker-Ethic George-Grinsted Network-Culture
First we take Manhattan
In the decade and a half since it was launched, Harvard Review has emerged as a major player on the national literary scene with an eclectic mix of contributors in a wide variety of genres and literary styles.
MOVIE REVIEW: Bobby
Seems like everybody wants a little piece of that Kennedy magic—Anthony Hopkins, Lindsay Lohan, Sharon Stone, Elijah Wood, William H. Macy, Demi Moore, Martin Sheen, Heather Graham, Helen Hunt, and Christian Slater to name a few
“Do You Make This Marketing Mistake?” Harvard Business Review…
In a recent piece in the Harvard Business Review, the authors remind us what a normal person wants when they buy something. And no, it is NOT the thing they buy. Harvard marketing professor Theodore Levitt, they write, used to tell his
My Harvard Business Reviews
Nick Carr, Neil Macheiter, the blogger swardley and others have commented on my recent Harvard Business Review article, the full text of which is available for free online through November. The article presents a model that non-techie
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