"Like Lin, I'm a Harvard graduate, albeit more than a decade ahead of him, and a second-generation Chinese-American. I'm also a fellow believer, one of those every-Sunday-worshiping, try-to-read-the-Bible-and-pray types, who agreed with Lin when he said to reporters after the Jazz game, "God works in mysterious and miraculous ways."
"...My gut tells me that Lin will not wind up like Tebow.... I have the sense that his is a quieter, potentially less polarizing but no less devout style of faith."
"New York's newest basketball sensation spends most nights on a couch in a one-bedroom apartment on the Lower East Side. The housing choice is understandable once you get to know Jeremy Lin.
He is a Harvard graduate playing in the National Basketball Association. He is an Asian-American in a league devoid of them, which makes him doubly anomalous. No team drafted Lin in 2010. Two teams cut him in December, before the Knicks picked him up.
His contract, potentially worth nearly $800,000, was not even guaranteed until Tuesday afternoon. So for the past six weeks, Lin, 23, has been sleeping in his brother Josh's living room, waiting for clarity and career security."
Title of review: "A Season in Hell." Kidder authored "Mountains beyond Mountains" in 2003, about work of Paul Farmer (from Harvard) and his organization Partners in Health, which has a large Haitian-run health organization in Haiti - pretty much intact after the earthquake.
Kidder authored "Mountains beyond Mountains" in 2003, about work of Paul Farmer (from Harvard) and his organization Partners in Health, which has a large Haitian-run health organization in Haiti - pretty much intact after the earthquake.
Harvard econ prof David Cutler says the Obama plan will cut costs-$600 billion over the next decade-and that those in Washington should not walk away from it.