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...would be sitting with the cookie in the room every day--and not just any cookie but one rich in fat and professionally baked to perfection. Actually, both chefs were once just like Mischel's weak-willed subjects. In Goin's first restaurant job, she would stand in the walk-in and eat so much ice cream with strawberries that she couldn't touch dinner. De Laurentiis was even worse. As a student at Le Cordon Bleu Paris, she often ate only what she cooked. "Some days were just pastry days," she says. "So Giada made about 50 croissants. Well...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: 2 Thin Chefs | 6/11/2006 | See Source »

...Later, Snow used a televised briefing to walk a cautious line of taking credit while preparing the public for future trials. "We saw scenes of celebration in Iraq. Does this mean that happy days are here again? Of course not," he said. But Snow suggested that Zarqawi's death was "a blow to the morale of the other side" and might send a helpful message within Iraq. "We have been crushing the opposition," he said, "but what happens is, the opposition's been controlling the airwaves with scattered, fragmentary acts of violence. In this...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Will Zarqawi's Death Mark a Turnaround for Bush? | 6/8/2006 | See Source »

...over such issues as dating an event to 20 millions years or 35 million years ago, Heinzerling says, without much disagreement over major concepts. If they diverged, the professors would inform the students that the issue was still contested.“You don’t want to walk away thinking, ‘oh, what my professor is saying is the absolute truth,’” she says.Students said that stylistic variations between professors, however, worked to invigorate the courses.“With two different lecture styles, it breaks things up, students have something...

Author: By Lulu Zhou, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Professors Score Big With Team Effort | 6/7/2006 | See Source »

...quick fix, a cosmetic solution to a systemic problem. It allows the College to say it is addressing the issue without doing anything fundamental about it.The problem lies deeper. I do not have an adviser. My department, economics, does not assign them to its undergraduates. Instead, there are departmental walk-in advising hours and House tutors. The result: I’ve never had a discussion about academic advising that lasted more than five minutes.The lack of engagement between students and faculty also means that professors rarely really get to know their students. Of those who know me at Harvard...

Author: By Stephen M. Marks, | Title: Leave No Undergraduate Behind | 6/7/2006 | See Source »

...interest to The Crimson’s audience than on my qualms about the newspaper “making,” rather then reporting, the news. Clearly, the story was of a kind of sordid interest to a substantial part of campus. But the newspaper appeared to walk a difficult line in equating interest with newsworthiness. If we decided objectively that this story appealed to our readers, we would in effect be originating the news by publicizing these private e-mail archives to a far greater audience. The paper was in the midst of publishing its Friday issue that...

Author: By Alex Slack | Title: Making the News | 6/7/2006 | See Source »

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