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There are two main systems of tunnels—steam and food. The steam tunnels emanate from the Harvard-owned plant at the corner of Memorial Drive and Western Avenue (which I discussed in my last column). The food tunnels, comprising only a small percentage of the total, link a central kitchen on JFK Street with smaller “finishing kitchens” in most of the River houses. They are about 15 feet wide and are constantly traversed by battery-powered carts equipped with heated and cooled food containers...

Author: By Zachary R. Heineman, | Title: Harvard's Teeming Underground Life | 3/10/2003 | See Source »

Zachary R. Heineman ’03 is a history and literature concentrator in Leverett House House. His column appears on alternate Mondays...

Author: By Zachary R. Heineman, | Title: Harvard's Teeming Underground Life | 3/10/2003 | See Source »

...what we study rather than burrow in the safer insignificance of our ideas. The more we deny (or fail to appreciate) the political import of art, deconstructing its minutiae rather than debating its argument, the more, as Madeleine S. Elfenbein ’04 put it in a recent column, we augment the mutually reinforcing powerlessness of what we learn. It doesn’t take a draft to engage a university more directly with the problems of war; it takes the audacity to make bigger claims about the purpose of a liberal arts education. As we read British...

Author: By Sue Meng, | Title: The Poet-Activists | 3/10/2003 | See Source »

...Meng ’03 is a history and literature concentrator in Adams House. Her column appears on alternate Mondays...

Author: By Sue Meng, | Title: The Poet-Activists | 3/10/2003 | See Source »

...slopes a dozen villagers joined a ragtag band from the Kurdistan Communist Party that maintains the sole defensive bunker in the area. In all, no more than twenty-five men headed out to meet the Iraqi column. What they found was a company of about 100 infantry soldiers, backed by armored vehicles and at least two or three tanks. As the Iraqi column neared they spotted the local men with their rifles. The men waited for the Iraqis to turn on them...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Iraq Jockeys For Position In Kurdistan | 3/8/2003 | See Source »

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