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...Larissa D. Koch ’08, and another by this year’s winner of the Suzanne Farrell award in dance, Molly M. Altenburg ’07. It will also feature an Irish dance sequence sure to ruffle a few tutus, and allow the dancers to exhibit a more informal side of ballet. In that same vein, the second performance slated two weekends from now is said to be an “informal showing” that should give the audience an “informative, behind-the-scenes feel,” according to Binney...

Author: By Peter B. Weston, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: On the Radar: Harvard Ballet Company | 4/12/2006 | See Source »

Baldomero Alejos, whose photographic documents of life in the Ayacucho region of Peru currently hang in the David Rockefeller Center for Latin American Studies (DRCLAS) building, considered himself a tradesman, not an artist. But considering his unusual talent for composition, dynamism, and detail as displayed in the exhibit, it seems that he sorely underestimated himself...

Author: By Jeremy S. Singer-vine, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Perusing A Peruvian Archive | 4/12/2006 | See Source »

...Peruvian armed forces. After the conflict ended in 1995, Alejos’ family went back to his studio and found 100,000 glass plate negatives, 60,000 still intact. From this archive Lucia, Peruvian photographer and Alejos’ granddaughter, has begun to print the photographs in the exhibit, the most comprehensive remaining visual record of mid-century Ayacucho...

Author: By Jeremy S. Singer-vine, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Perusing A Peruvian Archive | 4/12/2006 | See Source »

...wide range of Alejos’ photographs is immediately apparent upon visiting the DRCLAS exhibit. He was, one might say, an equal-opportunity photographer, making pictures of clergy, military men, public officials, the wealthy, the working class, and the poor, establishing many points of comparison among his subjects along...

Author: By Jeremy S. Singer-vine, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Perusing A Peruvian Archive | 4/12/2006 | See Source »

...anatomical features usually found only in animals that spend at least some of their time on land. It is, in short, exactly the sort of transitional animal Darwinian theory predicts, with new physical traits gradually emerging to help it thrive in a novel environment. And it has become scientists' Exhibit A in their long-running debate with creationists and other antievolutionists who have been using the lack of such missing-link organisms to argue that Darwin's theory is wrong...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Our Cousin The Fishapod | 4/10/2006 | See Source »

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