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...site for passers-by to visit long after the sounds from the last chords have floated away.For those who are trying to make a lasting impression on their audience, a link to the Internet is now almost a necessity. Buscaglia uses MySpace, and Gerard has his own domain name.‘WORKING BOOGER’UncleScam.org is another Web site whose owner performs in Harvard Square. But as provocative as his domain name may be, the site’s operator thinks his political message is best witnessed coming from the mouth of a life-sized puppet.His real name...

Author: By Beryl C.D. Lipton, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: BEAT OF THE STREET | 10/5/2007 | See Source »

...mysterious darkness, ominous voices and crystal ball are notably absent from New Age Astrology & Crystals, which since September 1 has occupied a corner of A Taste of Culture on Mass Ave. Rather, the glass-furnished domain of resident psychic Sabrina (neither teenaged, nor a witch, nor willing to be interviewed or give her last name) more closely resembles a psychiatrist’s office. “Hon, I am a spiritual healer,” Sabrina says. Do not worry, Sabrina wastes no time with Mars-ravages-the-Twelfth-House gibberish. Within ten minutes of laying out the Tarot...

Author: By Xiaofei Chen, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: The 'Spiritual Healer' Friends Network | 10/3/2007 | See Source »

...from a cultural stand, as conservatives frequently do. It is hard to argue that the puffs of pot that waft out of college dormitories are inculcating slothfulness or Marxism among developing generations. It is even harder to attack pot from a cultural standpoint when it is hardly the exclusive domain of young people; when presidential candidates can openly admit their use of the drug without consequence, it is clear enough that the mainstreaming of pot is complete. While the aesthetic horror of a lazy smoking hippie may still be an effective bogeyman for the farthest-right conservatives, most Americans correctly...

Author: By Garrett G.D. Nelson | Title: The Stoner’s Dilemma | 10/1/2007 | See Source »

Here, at least, the copyright law follows our intuitions. Access to ideas is a high priority in a democratic society. The Constitutional authorization to “promote the progress of science,” leaves facts in the public domain, as do the statutes and cases interpreting them. Authors are given copyright incentives to induce them to share their works and the ideas in them with the public. We would expect an academic bookstore to appreciate that it too gains from authors’ free access to the facts and ideas in the world around them...

Author: By Angela Kang, John G. Palfrey, jr., and Wendy M. Seltzer | Title: Has Sense Flown the Coop? | 9/26/2007 | See Source »

According to the Harvard University Registrar’s Office, lotteries are currently the domain of individual professors, who have the freedom to inform their students of results at any time. To solve the problem of late lotteries, the College should mandate that all lotteries end by 5 p.m. on the Thursday before Study Card day, at least 24 hours before study cards are due. That would give students enough time to see their advisers, shop additional courses, and make informed decisions...

Author: By The Crimson Staff | Title: Let’s Fix Lotteries | 9/24/2007 | See Source »

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