OBAMA’S
October 22, 2009 Vol. CXXIX, No. 4
HLS’ Largest
Donors Dead
N O B E L
CASPERSEN AND WASSERSTEIN
TO BE MEMORIALIZED BY
N.W. CORNER COMPLEX
BY MATTHEW W. HUTCHINS
After Being Shocked, Awed, HLS Students From
Finn Caspersen Took Own Life
World Wonders: Why? Around the World React
BY CHRIS SZABLA
Under Mysterious Circumstances
The Record asked HLS students to submit
their views on President Obama’s Nobel Prize “YOU NEVER GET TO PERFECTION.”
The announcement elicited audible gasps from and convened a forum on Tuesday, Oct. 20 for
the audience in Oslo, and visible gapes on faces What could an heir to a billion
submitters to voice their opinions in public. dollar fortune, privileged with an
worldwide. The White House Press Secretary, Our panel included views from LL.M.s Mo-
Robert Gibbs, whose job is to react to such de- education at Harvard Law
hammed S. Helal of Egypt, Alfonso Lamadrid School, want most in life? For
velopments, was rendered practically speechless de Pablo of Spain, and Matthias C. Kettemann
(the word "wow" was all he managed to emit, to Finn M.W. Caspersen ’66, heir to
of Austria, and was introduced by Record Co- the chairmanship of Beneficial
one reporter). For many, the initial shock was fol- Editor-in-Chief Matthew Hutchins. During the
lowed by an immediate and obvious question: Corporation, philanthropy was
discussion, speakers elaborated on their writ- one of the most rewarding pur-
why? Scarcely a year into his presidency, Barack ten opinions, which appear on page three of
Obama ’91 had won one of the most coveted suits available in a life of wealth
this issue, with a comment by Prof. Charles and success. After the sale of Beneficial to Household In-
awards on earth: the Nobel Peace Prize, and the Ogletree. A recording of the event will soon
fact that the prize committee seemed to place ternational in 1998 for approximately $9 billion, Caspersen
be available at hlrecord.org. managed a private investment fund, Knickerbocker Man-
more weight on the direction of his policies than
his actual achievements thus far left many agement, overseeing the assets of trusts and foundations.
scratching their heads. Outside of his business life, Caspersen was a selfless con-
The committee justified itself by citing the tributor to the success of HLS, including the largest dona-
award's mission, and precedent: it is to be given tion for the Northwest Corner Project, his chairmanship of
to an individual whose efforts bring the world in the Dean’s Advisory Board, and chairmanship of the “Set-
the direction of peace. In 1971, it recognized such ting the Standard” campaign, which raised a phenomenal
efforts in the policy of Eastern Bloc engagement, total of $476,475,707 for HLS.
or Ostpolitik, pursued by West German Chancel- According to Louis Kaplow ’81, the Finn M.W.
Nobel, continued on pg. 2 Caspersen and Household International Professor of Law
and Economics, contributing to HLS provided Caspersen
with great personal satisfaction. “I tried to personally thank
S P EC I A L C O M M EN T him, but he was not an easy person to thank. He seemed not
interested, personally, in having praise bestowed upon him-
History Shows Precedent, Prescience of Obama’s Prize self, and much more interested in participating in the de-
BY MATTHEW W. HUTCHINS armies and for the holding and rifice like Mother Teresa and velopment of the law school as a continuing enterprise.”
promotion of peace con- Albert Schweitzer. Although Caspersen was tireless in his efforts to generate contribu-
Each year a committee of gresses.” Past Nobel Peace there have been strongly criti- tions to the law school. In an interview with the Harvard
Norwegians is convened to de- Prize honorees have ranged cal reactions to selections like Law Bulletin after the conclusion of the “Setting the Stan-
cide what person will receive from visionary leaders like Henry Kissinger and Yasser dard” Campaign, Caspersen said, “You always have to do
the prize endowed by Alfred Martin Luther King Jr. and Arafat, the high esteem in more. You never get to perfection.”
Nobel to recognize “the person Lech Wałęsa to tireless but less which most honorees are held It may remain a perpetual mystery why a man who ap-
who shall have done the most visible diplomats and negotia- has prompted a world full of peared to have everything – wealth, a family, social notori-
or the best work for fraternity tors like Ralph Bunche and watchers to wait each year to ety, and a generous philanthropic nature – would decide to
between nations, for the aboli- Martti Ahtisaari as well as in- learn the next name lifted into end it all. The New York Times has indicated that Caspersen
tion or reduction of standing spirational models of self-sac- the pantheon of humanity's may have been the subject of a Federal investigation. What-
Comment, cont’d on pg. 2 ever information comes to light in the future, the impact of
INSIDE
Harvard Out of Flu Vaccine
Caspersen’s contributions to the law school will secure the
ability of HLS to continue setting the standard for legal ed-
ucation into the twenty-first century.
On Wednesday morning, Harvard Law School awoke to the
news that the clinic scheduled that day to administer the sea-
The HL Record sonal flu vaccine would be cancelled due to lack of adequate Bruce Wasserstein Went From Nader
vaccine supplies. A later e-mail further stated that all Harvard Acolyte to Wall Street Legend
University flu clinics had been cancelled due to the shortage.
News According to University Health Services, over 15,000 vaccines
“CITIZEN WASSERSTEIN”
have been administered in the last month and a half, prompting
• Israeli Draft-Dodger Speaks
UHS to close its seasonal clinics early even though a larger sup- Described by his colleagues as
• Law School Psyched for Psych ply had been ordered than in previous years. a prodigy, Bruce Wasserstein ’70
UHS will be proceeding with scheduled clinics in under- entered Harvard University as a
Opinion graduate dining halls, but has encountered difficulty in receiv- joint J.D./M.B.A. student at the
• Has Guinea Lost its Way? ing its final shipment of an additional 1600 doses that were young age of 19, and once armed
• Libson Treaty and the New EU needed for the other clinics around campus. UHS advises stu- with an education in business and
• Inside the UK Supreme Court dents seeking vaccination to contact local pharmacies. law, he took Wall Street by storm,
Although the supply of seasonal flu vaccine has been de- quickly rising from a start at Cra-
Features pleted, UHS anticipates providing H1N1 vaccines once a sup- vath, Swaine & Moore to a management role at First Boston
• Are J.D.s Antisocial? ply becomes available. UHS has said that it will conduct the Donors, continued on pg. 2
• Cambridge’s Haloween Heaven vaccination for H1N1 according to “guidelines established by
NEW! A BIGGER, BETTER HLRECORD.ORG
public health authorities to prioritize distribution.”
O B A M A’ S N O B E L
Page 2 Harvard Law Record October 22, 2009
the hours after the Prize. David A. Morse ’32 accepted it on behalf of accords
even been nominated. The shock of the
with news left commentators and the public
announcement that
Obama had won
the International Labor Organization in 1969. Egypt,
promoting
before
the
disoriented, and as the novelty of the
idea faded, the diversity of reactions to
the prize. construction of the President's Nobel became crystal-
Comment has Israeli settlements ized in opinions with little correspon-
also focused on the effect the award might have on Obama's in Palestinian territories and involving his country in the dence to individual political alignment.
political priorities. Critics believe it is likely to intensify crit- Lebanese civil war of the 1980s. Arch-conservatives certainly did not
icism that the President has achieved little in the way of ac- Whatever the award's implications or consequences, it re- hesitate to co-opt this latest honor as a
tual foreign policy success, despite his lofty initiatives. His mains a tremendous achievement for the young president, new focal point around which to con-
persuading the UN General Assembly to adopt a resolution whose life has been marked by early triumphs and firsts. The centrate their perpetual campaign
on the reduction of nuclear weapons has been a rare success first African-American editor of the Harvard Law Review against the President, asking the ques-
in a year when multilateral overtures have failed to result in and the first black President, he is now the second Harvard tion, “What has Obama done to deserve
much coordinated action on the financial crisis or other Law School alumnus to win the award, and the first to be this Prize?” and deriding it as a political
pressing global issues, such as climate change. able to claim it as his own right (David A. Morse '32 accepted maneuver by a cadre of socialist Euro-
Obama has also been slow to change direction on many the award on behalf of the International Labor Organization peans who are more enamored with
policies initiated by his predecessor, George W. Bush, a in 1969). He will now be the third sitting U.S. President to Obama than his own American sup-
pledge many have pointed to as the primary motivation for win the award, after Theodore Roosevelt and Woodrow Wil- porters.
the award. His January pledge to close the controversial de- son, and, with Carter, the fourth President to receive it. On the other side of the aisle, many
tention facility at Guantanamo Bay, for example, remains un- Clearly surprised himself, the President brushed off any praised the Prize as a stamp of interna-
fulfilled. Obama has also reportedly sparred with his speculation he would not accept the award some have called tional approval on a drastically re-
Attorney General, Eric Holder, over prosecution of U.S. of- "premature" during a Rose Garden press conference. “I am designed American foreign policy and
ficials involved in torture. honored and humbled," he said. “I will accept this award as vision of the nation within the world
But the Nobel might also be an intervention – an attempt a call to action”. community. Talk, they said, is no small
thing when it moves the world to for-
Donors, continued from pg. 1 give past failings and unite once again
and the establishment of the mergers and acquisitions bou- As a philanthropist, Wasserstein was a generous man, hav- behind the U.S. banner. But many of the
tique, Wasserstein Perella Group. Over his several decades ing recently made a major donation to HLS of $25 million for voices criticizing the Nobel commit-
on Wall Street, Wasserstein made history through his coor- the construction of the Northwest Corner complex. But tee's selection came from supporters of
dination of blockbuster mergers like the acquisition of RJR Green remembers him for both his generosity and his loy- the President, with a common chorus
Nabisco by Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co., the acquisition alty. “If he took you into his orbit of confidence at a personal soon becoming, “Too much, too soon.”
of Warner Bros. by Time, Inc., and the merger of AOL and level, a company level, or an educational level, he stuck with As the present controversy fades into
Time Warner in 2000. After the sale of Wasserstein Perella & you in good times and bad.” In Green’s campaign to become historical evaluation, President Obama
Co., Wasserstein became the head of Lazard Ltd., where he mayor of New York, Wasserstein acted as his campaign fi- will be compared to other laureates not
organized the investment bank’s 2005 IPO and where the nance manager, and though Green had a history as a populist for the actions of his first one hundred
Wall Street Journal reports he was recently engaged in the consumer advocate, Wasserstein was able to convince his days but for the lasting impact of his
bid by Kraft for Cadbury Plc. Wall Street colleagues to support his campaign. In a remem- term in office, but even from the mo-
Despite his phenomenal success on Wall Street, Wasser- brance published to Bloomberg.com on October 20th, Green ment of its announcement, the history
stein’s beginnings as a law student were characterized by a said that even after his defeat in the 2001 mayoral election he of the prize reveals a range of figures
passion for civil liberties. Mark J. Green ’70, who ran against received encouragement from Wasserstein to “run for gov- into which the President already fits as
Wasserstein to be the head of the Harvard Civil Rights-Civil ernor”. “The understanding was that I shouldn’t advise him a rising leader of efforts at international
Liberties Law Review, remembers a quiet genius who “basi- on business, but he could counsel me on government.” cooperation and the limitation of the
cally brained his way to success”. Green, who has had a long In addition to his investment banking activity, Wasserstein weapons of war. To the rue of many Re-
career in public advocacy, has written twenty-two books, and carried an interest in writing throughout his life, which Green publicans, the conditions for Obama's
was the Democratic candidate for mayor of New York in the described in his Bloomberg.com remembrance, analogizing success were made abundantly possible
2001 election against Michael Bloomberg, was a lifelong Wasserstein to Charles Foster Kane. From his early experi- by the policies of his predecesor,
friend of Wasserstein. “Looking back, I guess it was impos- ence as editor-in-chief at the Michigan Daily, as managing George W. Bush, but this should in no
sible to know that this fellow law student, who I would eat editor at the Harvard CR-CL Law Review, and his work with way diminish the significance of ac-
with at Harkness 42 years ago, would end up the leading in- Green and Nader, Wasserstein returned to publishing as an tions that have changed the interna-
vestment banker of his era and one of the leading donors to owner by purchasing American Lawyer and New York Mag- tional tide of hostility against America
HLS ever,” said Green in an interview with the Record. “It azine, partly with the goal of improving publication quality. which was rising throughout the Bush
wasn’t pedigree or GQ looks, or a Clintonian public person- “All his deals and billions notwithstanding, Wasserstein’s era. The Nobel committee has given us
ality. He added value, big time, to his clients and his friends.” ‘rosebud’ was journalism,” said Green. cause to consider that the President has
When Green won the place as editor-in-chief at CR-CL, he With his untimely passage the HLS community can only thus far demonstrated a new vision of
made Wasserstein his managing editor, a partnership which imagine the accomplishments that may have been yet to international cooperation, a new com-
would continue in their work for Ralph Nader ’58. Together come. Nader looks back with certainty that the community mitment to multilateralism, and a nu-
they authored the book With Justice for Some: An Indictment has lost one of its most valuable citizens. “Bruce Wasserstein anced understanding of the give and
of the Law by Young Advocates and worked together on is heralded as a brilliant investment banker and financier who take that is necessary to coax his coun-
“Closed Enterprise System”, a critical view of antitrust en- avoided the egregious excesses of his speculative competi- terparts to depart from the inherently
forcement. “He was always the smartest guy in the room,” tors. What is not known is his philanthropy, which was ac- stubborn and vindictive behavior of na-
said Green. “But by and large he was calm and quiet, so celerating into imaginative dimensions. Philanthropically, it tional leaders and humans in general.
when he spoke, people listened.” Nader remembers Wasser- can be said that the best of his past would have been the least From the moment he took office, the
stein as a bright, ambitious man with a dream of being Chair- of his future, so tragically cut short.” Despite its early end, President expressed a desire to end the
man of the SEC, but whose business responsibilities Wasserstein’s life will be remembered, in Wall Street and widely criticized conduct of the U.S.
precluded such a career. “If he had been Chairman ten years New York for his legendary business acumen, and at Har- military at Guantanamo Bay, he began
ago, we might not have had some of this trouble,” said Nader vard Law School for his generous contribution to the con- the acceleration of the draw down of
in an interview for the Harvard Law Record. struction of the Northwest Corner. Comment, cont’d on pg. 11
O B A M A’ S N O B E L
October 22, 2009 Harvard Law Record Page 3
R E A C T I O N S
The Record asked members of the Harvard Law School community to submit
short reactions to President Obama’s reception of the Nobel Peace Prize in
advance of our special forum on the issue. We have published them all, below.
I was surprised and pleased to learn that President Obama had won the Nobel
Peace Prize. His humility and deference in receiving an award that has been
presented to such luminaries as Mother Teresa, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., and
Nelson Mandela, among others, illustrates both his uncanny ability to focus not
on awards but actual progress, and a commitment to work tirelessly to establish
a safer and more collaborative world. His aspirations to close Guantanamo, ne-
gotiate peace in the Middle East, talk with leaders of other countries even when
we have massive differences in priorities and objectives, demonstrates his firm
commitment to continue working around the clock so that, in time, we will all Mohammed Helal, second from left, speaks during the Record’s forum on
see what the Nobel Prize committee saw in honoring him now. The expected Pres. Obama’s Nobel Prize. From left to right: Record Co-Editor-in-Chief
criticism, because he is so new in office, also ignores the almost immediate Matt Hutchins, Helal, Alfonso Lamadrid de Pablo, and Matthias Kettemann
transformation of global excitement concerning his election alone and it rein-
forces a global commitment to end all forms of conflict and unite in a collabo-
2) $680,000 to study the importance of “human security”, a new security con- In the preface to her book Men in Dark Times (1968), Hannah Arendt wrote
cept that focuses on individuals and not on states, thereby providing new in- that “even in the darkest of times we have the right to expect some illumination,
sights on how to combat sources of insecurity, including failing states and and that such illumination may well come less from theories and concepts than
over-‘securitization’. from the uncertain, flickering, and often weak light that some men and women,
in their lives and their works, will kindle under almost all circumstances and
3) $30,000 for a study analyzing the effects of Harvard students’ air condi- shed over the time span that was given them on earth....”
tioner-induced colds and flus on the U.S. health system. President Obama has shed a powerful light of hope upon the dark times in
which we live. His accomplishments in the pursuit of peace can hardly be
4) $9,000 to reintroduce warm breakfast in Harvard dining halls. matched: he has inspired millions all over the planet; he has gained back the re-
spect and leadership with which the United States can make a difference on the
5) $1,000 to make sure Chauncy Street gets a bike path facing westwards. global stage; and he has set the world on a different path and shared spirit.
Obama's Nobel Prize is an encouragement for all of us not to let this light
Since this is settled, Mr. President, you can now channel your forces towards dim.
making peace in the Mideast and having Congress pass health care reform.
Alfonso Lamadrid de Pablo is an LL.M. student from Spain.
Matthias C. Kettemann is an LL.M. student from Austria.
CORRECTION:
Apologies to Profs. Elizabeth Warren and Allen
Look for a Dissenting
Ferrell. Our front page caption last week failed to
Podcast of our Opinion?
Nobel Forum!
correctly identify them, and another caption mis - EMAIL
RECORD@ LAW
spelled Prof. Ferrell’s name. See our Web .pdf for the Coming Soon on
correct captions. hlrecord.org
Page 4 Harvard Law Record October 22, 2009
Record
BY MATTHIAS C. KETTEMANN me a personal letter written personally Under the Lisbon treaty, the role of
by [British Conservative Party leader the European Parliament is strength-
In seven days, the European Union David] Cameron from July which is ened. The Parliament receives new
will take a big step forward. After a suggesting [to hold out], but I cannot powers over EU legislation, including
painful process that overshadowed Eu- wait until the British election and I will the EU budget and international agree-
ropean policy debates for years, the Lis- not.” ments. The so-called “co-decision pro-
EStabLiShEd MCMXLVi
bon Treaty, intended to overhaul the Provided they win, David Cameron’s cedure” will make the Parliament an
Matthew W. Hutchins
Editors-in-Chief
Union’s institutional infrastructure, will Conservatives have vowed to hold a equal partner of the Council, represent-
Chris Szabla most likely be ratified by Vaclav Klaus, referendum on the Lisbon Treaty, which ing Member States, for almost all of EU
the Czech Republic’s Euroskeptic pres- would be a sure way of sinking it. But legislation. National parliaments will
ident, at the EU also play a larger
News: Rebecca Agule
Staff Editors
summit in Brus- role in EU deci-
Opinion: Jessica Corsi sels. Klaus is the sion-making
Sports: Mark Samburg last one to hold trough a new
out. 26 of the 27 monitoring mech-
member states anism to ensure
Mohammed S. Helal have already rati- subsidiarity, or
Contributing Writers
carry on the all the work TV feeds and a more public welcomed, not casti-
Obama decide to call. will not change. It will breach they should be
The Treaty also extends the Union’s competences to cer-
tain sensitive policy areas including combating terrorism and of the House of Lords as profile, the UK Supreme Court gated. Those who call
the Privy Council. The might lose its judicial excel- law, rather than to say
tackling crime, and, to some extent, energy policy, public well as some functions of for judges to apply the
same Law Lords have lence, becoming more like its what it should be, are
health, civil protection, climate change, services of general
interest, research, space, territorial cohesion, commercial
policy, humanitarian aid, sport, tourism and administrative been transformed into the
new Justices and differ
U.S. counterpart.” at odds with the very
nature of the common
cooperation.
The Lisbon Treaty will also ensure that the role of the EU only in name, and it is law and seem con-
as an actor on the global stage is enhanced. A new High Rep- hoped the same high standard of legal analysis sumed in theories of mob justice rather than in
resentative for the Union in Foreign Affairs and Security and detachment from politics will remain. legal reasoning. Judicial activism does not mean
Policy, who is – at the same time – Vice-President of the This all sounds pretty good, save for the new the end of the rule of law; in fact, a strong judi-
Commission, will ensure the visibility of EU external action, court’s £90 million start-up check. Still, the old ciary is necessary to give it effect. Given the
even though his interaction with the EU President is yet to Law Lords maintained their judicial excellence choice of a judge or a politician, I know which
be defined. The High Representative will be supported by a by remaining rather aloof from the political one I’d pick.
new European External Action Service, an EU diplomatic scene. The danger is that with live TV feeds and Despite its garish emblem, its hideous building
corps. a more public profile, the new court might lose and its astonishing price tag, the new Supreme
Contrary to some popular myths, especially rampant in this and become more like the U.S. Supreme Court should be welcomed. It ensures true sep-
Ireland before the its first referendum on the Treaty, and in Court. Deadlock in a partisan court is not good aration of powers. It buttresses judicial inde-
the United Kingdom, the new Treaty does not impinge on for the law. Politics harms legal reasoning, it sti- pendence while offering the possibility of a more
the neutrality of member states, does not put public services fles judicial law making and at its worst leads to accountable executive. After the swearing in, as
at risk, does not weaken the social achievements of member injustice. The creation of a Supreme Court is to the Justices take off their new black and gold
states, does not change Irish or Polish laws on abortion, nor ensure that there can be no interference from the robes, they should be proud of themselves. In
does it take away the British pound, change Czech laws on politicians. Thankfully, the appointment process their own, relatively understated British way,
German-held property after WWII, change tax laws, or cre- gives the executive, and the legislature virtually they have created a truly independent final court,
ate a European super-state, or a European army poised to no say, so the problems of the U.S. seem un- which became largely of their own design once
strike in conflict zones, take away member states’ right to likely, and the same high calibre judicial minds the politicians became bored with the project.
formulate their foreign policy within the framework of prior will still be present. If the court is to be a suc- The name grates, parts of the court are rather
treaty commitments, or aim to take away Security Council cess, though, the justices must remember that, tacky, and some of the old world charm has
seats of Permanent Members. first and foremost, they are lawyers. They should gone, but behind this we are left with a true and
Unfortunately, the Lisbon Treaty will also not make the not be swayed by public opinion; a court based independent instrument of justice, and that’s
EU treaties easier to read. But, if they were, who would need on this is no court at all. something with which we shouldn’t quibble.
lawyers? The need to follow the law rather than the ebb
and flow of the public mood should not mean Peter Wickham is an LL.M. student from the
Matthias C. Kettemann is an LL.M. student from Austria. that the court is dissuaded from developing the United Kingdom.
Send Us Your
Comments and Opinions!
Next Record:
EMAIL RECORD@ LAW
November 5
October 22, 2009 Harvard Law Record Page 10
The Garment District: It’s Not a District, it’s a Store (and it’s Halloween Heaven)
BY JENNY PAUL choose to rent matching his-and-her costumes, such as
the Cinderella and Prince Charming set or the medieval Other Halloween
Are you rushing to cobble together a costume for next Romeo and Juliet ensemble. Boston Costume has 5,000
week’s Halloween party? Whether you need to find an costumes available for rental, manager Terry Anderson
costume Hot spots:
entire costume or just need to add the finishing touch to said. “They go anywhere from Roman and Egyptian to Dorothy’s Boutique
your outfit, look no further than The Garment District, mascot type ones, like grizzly bears and lions,” Ander- 190 Massachusetts Ave., Boston
a Cambridge Halloween hotspot with two floors full of son said, noting the rentals range in price from $45 to Mon - Sat: 10 a.m. - 6:30 p.m
costumes and accessories. The $175, with an average cost of $95.
store carries an array of ready- This year, the store took its first
Sunday from 12 to 6 p.m.
to-wear costumes, ranging from Halloween rental order in February
T Stop: Hynes Convention Center
Grecian goddess outfits to pirate and probably will take its last the day (Green Line)
get-ups to flapper dresses. Cus- after Halloween for parties being
tomers on a budget can check held on Sunday, he said. This year, Goodwill Retail Stores
out the Garment District’s sec- the most popular rental choices have 520 Massachusetts Ave., Cam-
ond floor, where the store sells a been storm trooper, Batman and griz-
variety of vintage clothes that zly bear costumes, he said. Because it
bridge
“You can make something from the 50s to Space Age going to have a much better time and not stress in the
Mon - Sat: 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.
stuff.” Olenick said he encourages customers who ask crowds.”
Sunday from 12 to 6 p.m.
for his advice to put together their own costumes. “I say Be prepared to encounter crowds during the week T Stop: Pleasant Street
make your own for the most part, because it’s more fun leading up to Halloween — The Garment District does (Green Line)
that way,” he said. “You won’t be walking down double to triple its usual business in October, said
Comm. Ave. [in Boston] wearing the same thing as a Olenick, the assistant manager. The store is open from
girl 15 feet away from you.” 11 a.m. to midnight Sunday through Friday and from 9
Costume rentals are available through Boston Cos- a.m. to midnight on Saturday through Oct. 31. The Gar- Film: Hamamoto’s
tume, located within the first floor. The selections are ment District is located at 200 Broadway, four blocks “Masters of the Pillow”
pricier, but more elaborate, and customers can even from the Kendall-MIT T stop on the Red Line.
BY TITUS LIN
In an attempt to break stereotypes
From Classroom
to Clubhouse:
Dersh in the
Dugout
Professor Alan Dershowitz and
Red Sox CEO Larry Lucchino
pose with the World Series tro-
phies and with the students in
the Dershowitz/Lucchino first
year reading group on Sports
and The Law.