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...always assumed that we would renovate this as a complement to the new site, as part of a larger building project,” Cuno says...

Author: By J. hale Russell, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Art Museums Mull Overhaul | 11/4/2002 | See Source »

Most visiting students come to Harvard specifically for the academic programs that either complement their area of study—economics is an overwhelmingly popular concentration—or allow them to experience the American liberal arts education that contrasts sharply with the pre-professional focus of many European and Asian universities. Momsen, who is taking mostly economics classes and is cross-registered at HBS and KSG, says he came to Harvard for an educational experience his university in Germany doesn’t offer...

Author: By Eugenia V. Levenson, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Studying Abroad at Harvard? | 10/31/2002 | See Source »

...aesthetics of the church complement the dance in unexpected ways. The stained glass filters the waning light and by 6 p.m. the church is awash in a peach and cobalt glow. As twilight approaches, the dancer’s bending shadows are cast on the church’s stone walls. The audience seated in an intimate three-tier platform directly in front of the dancers challenges the traditional distance between performer and viewer. Cabaret-like tables pepper the tiers. Reminiscent of smoke-filled clubs, the Weimar republic and Marlene Dietrich, Mateo says the tables allow the audience...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Theater at Harvard | 10/31/2002 | See Source »

...Establish that “This is total bullshit” is the mathematical complement to the phrase “Shit is so real right now.” Both are equally viable and equally true. Having obsessively used the latter for some weeks, we decide to make a paradigm shift to the former. Realize that the traffic, the crisp fall weather, the car and us are all total bullshit...

Author: By Jacob Rubin, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Adventures in Enthusiastic Idiocy | 10/24/2002 | See Source »

...greater than the toll in America?that it could turn Indonesia, the world's fourth most-populous country, into a failed state. Just four years after the dictator Suharto was run out of office, the sprawling archipelago is struggling to emerge as a stable democracy. It hosts a full complement of developing-country ills: endemic corruption, erratic courts, reform-resistant corporations, crippling national debt, a barely functioning banking sector and falling investment. Psychological shock waves surging outward from Kuta Beach are bound to intersect with the nation's fragile social and political ecosystem in unpredictable ways, testing the allegiances...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Failed State? | 10/21/2002 | See Source »

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