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...problems. My blockmate, Samir, is a brilliant mathematician and will probably run the World Bank someday—that is, if he’s not an ESPN commentator. I never would have become interested in NCAA sports or understood divisibility rules without him. My uberhip chemisty-concentrating music editor, Fritz, lectures me with equal expertise on everything from Chinese linguistics to Fermi’s law to the merits of the new Ghostface Killah album. Truth be told, Jill is probably just a little too preppy; Samir, too brilliant; and Fritz, too pretentious. And, potential members of the Class...

Author: By Kristina M. Moore, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Falling in Love Again | 4/19/2006 | See Source »

...living at Harvard is in the Houses. FM scoured both River and Quad, leaving no roach-infested walk-through unvisited and no synonym for “small” unused, to identify the most atrocious rooms. The few and the proud, all housing sophomores: Lowell M-12: Crimson editor Joy Z. Chen is at a loss to describe the shape of the Polly Pocket-sized common room in her double—“A truncated square? A pentagon, I guess.” The bedroom is even tinier, requiring Chen to climb over her desk to enter...

Author: By Alwa A. Cooper, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Lifestyles of the Cramped and Irate | 4/19/2006 | See Source »

...modern architecture. Payne looks at architecture “in the context of its own time—how it relates to culture, the sciences, and literary art,” she said. And currently, this “context” includes religion. Payne is the general editor for an upcoming encyclopedia on world religious architecture. The volume will look at architecture in relation to the history of religion, history of rituals, and objects, which are often used for inspiration. Objects, she said, “while not architecture in themselves, can be seen as a bridge to architecture...

Author: By Melissa Quino mccreery, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Prof Nabs Coveted Architecture Award | 4/19/2006 | See Source »

...Steinberg said. After the trial, Dershowitz quipped, “I spent months preparing for this; I took a leave of absence to get ready.” Organizer Philip A. Ernst ’06, Vice President for Education at Hillel and also a Crimson editor, said he was very pleased with the turnout. Emil Pitkin ’09 said of the trial, “It was a remarkable pleasure to be in the presence of two scholars and entertainers who represented the craft...

Author: By Pamela T. Freed, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Professors Put Pharaoh on Trial | 4/18/2006 | See Source »

...know that we’re making. We’re just coming to terms with the idea of the Internet as a megaphone, taking the things we say and making them ten thousand times louder, capable of being heard around the world. A poorly worded letter to the editor or a heat-of-the-moment, too-ambitious argument on a mailing list can shut the door on a nascent political career. That it’s a megaphone in time as well as in space is harder to internalize, though, particularly when we mean time in a broader sense...

Author: By Matthew A. Gline, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Time to Reflect | 4/18/2006 | See Source »

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