Word: arts
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...terrorized Crimson designers with what some called our “cracked-out” ideas, like “Let’s turn the baseball/softball supplement into a graphic novel,” and “Can the spread for the Commencement issue be an art gallery...
Having travelled across Europe to conduct research on female composers, Cecelia A. H. Porter ’60—a critic for The Washington Post—said that her ability to reap the benefits of art was supported by her family’s encouragement...
Audience members—most of whom were 1960 graduates—shared their opinions and asked questions about the revolutionary nature of art...
...scratch. Without that extra hand, Harvard students fumble their own imaginations. As a result, creativity exists at Harvard but only in trace amounts. With that exam booklet always in hand, most people only have time to create a persona rather than their masterpieces. We get walking, talking works-of-art rather than artists. We all have things to say, but even the best fall victim to the environment and the little Type-A sixth grader huddled inside their souls. For this, I’ll blame Harvard...
...fabricated an academic history worthy of a university president. Even though his resume has significantly more padding than most, one can imagine that there are a few resumes floating out there among the Harvard senior class that do look quite similar to Wheeler’s work of art. As we have been told ad nauseum, the students here at Harvard are incredible and have the credentials to prove it—prizes, published works, and scholarships out the wazoo. But I am not one of those students, and neither was Wheeler. And with Commencement upon me, I am starting...