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Despite its high-caliber casting and novel approach to the overused underdog premise, “Rocket Science” never really decides whether it wants to be dramatic, insightful or funny. Audiences aren’t looking for a cookie-cutter happy ending, but finding a satisfying climax really shouldn’t be rocket science...

Author: By Andrew E. Lai, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Rocket Science | 8/3/2007 | See Source »

...Hamilton has a rough job, but somebody's gotta do it. The Florida-born chemical engineer cruises the Caribbean on his 44-ft. cutter in search of the world's best rums. He's not looking for the pale stuff you guzzle with Coca-Cola; he's out for the darker, lesser-known aged rums you sip from a snifter. That's right--rum in a snifter. Hamilton's website fans know him as the Minister of Rum, and he's issued a new decree: rum after dinner instead of the traditional brandy or single-malt scotch. "We all remember...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Rum Gets Some Respect | 7/5/2007 | See Source »

...light of Ott's torch. "C'mon, bro," says Ott. "How would you feel if someone got badly stabbed tonight, and died, by the same people that did this?" The teenager, who is mysteriously wearing a clean shirt turned inside out, admits that the wound, from a box cutter, was received in a fight with members of the Junior Horse Pack gang. The name is new to the police but "that's not surprising," says police inspector Jason Hewett. "They can form overnight and be gone the next day. Some of them we hear of once and never hear...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Tribal Trouble | 7/5/2007 | See Source »

...essays criticizing the state of American poetry. He accused it of "intellectual and spiritual stagnation." He called out poets for being addicted to lyric poetry (as opposed to, say, epic or satirical poetry) and for being obsessed with formal experimentation. He dissed M.F.A. programs for churning out careerist, cookie-cutter poets who were "sustained by a system of fellowships, grants, and other subsidies that absolve recipients of the responsibility to write books that a reader who is not a specialist might enjoy, might even...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Poems for the People | 6/7/2007 | See Source »

...personally very comfortable in envisaging that there would be offices of different types,” says Vice Provost for International Affairs Jorge I. Dominguez. “There would be no attempt of having a simple cookie cutter of saying they have to be all alike...

Author: By Madeline W. Lissner, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Going Global: Harvard’s Stamp Abroad | 6/6/2007 | See Source »

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