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Senior David Landau, the gridders' opening day starter, led Harvard with a .500 completion percentage (37-for-74) and amassed 469 yards. He was intercepted 10 times, however, and did not connect on a single scoring pass. Bill Koehler, who started two games at QB, finished 19-for-41 for 206 yards and four interceptions...

Author: By Geoffrey Simon, | Title: Everything You Always Wanted to Know About The Game... | 11/25/1986 | See Source »

...entropy. His best works, like Beth Gimel, 1958, or Beth Chaf, 1959, touch upon the exalted otherness of nature (one might be looking at an aurora borealis or a butte), and their concentration on broad effect of light and color, coupled with the impersonality of their technique, seems to connect back through Georgia O'Keeffe's watercolors to 19th century American luminism. (To visit Washington in the spring and see its broad avenues framed in V perspectives of flowering plums and cherries is perhaps to sense a connection with Louis' late "Unfurleds" of 1960-61.) Yet despite his expertise, precision...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: A Look At a Beautiful Impasse | 11/10/1986 | See Source »

...Jimmy Fund show three years ago. "A lot of the undergraduates who work on the Jimmy Fund show know very little about skating, and Paul helps bridge the gap between the actual skaters and the students. It also helps the skaters when they come that they have someone to connect with...

Author: By Lea A. Saslav, | Title: Skating Through Harvard | 10/16/1986 | See Source »

...optical technology is moving rapidly into place. Communications companies have started to lay new transoceanic cables that can compete handily with space satellites. Fiber-optic links are allowing far-flung corporations to install networks of private video hookups and connect office buildings into a new kind of "optical city." Optical technology is providing sensitive nerve endings for devices like smoke detectors and blood analyzers. Meanwhile, scientists in the U.S., Western Europe and Japan are pushing hard toward a still much-in-the-future optical computer that uses photons rather than electrons for number-crunching efficiency. The massively powerful optical brain...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: And Now, the Age of Light | 10/6/1986 | See Source »

...politics of indoor tanning are delicate and few students publicly admit to salon membership. No one wants to seem overtly narcissistic, and a year-round tan can clash with the intellectual image. It's okay for Zonker Harris, but it's hard to connect a lucite tanning bed with, say, the head of your department...

Author: By Amy N. Ripich, | Title: Sun in the Square Isn't Just for Summer | 9/26/1986 | See Source »

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