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...director of community relations for Boston, who quickly removed the eraser-sized gray house jamming the tabletop model of Harvard’s properties in Allston. It was the only hiccup in a media tour yesterday afternoon of the new “Harvard in Allston Exhibit Room” in the Holyoke Center arcade. Students, faculty, and Allston residents will tour the room, which houses the model and roughly a dozen maps, and comment on Harvard’s plans for its future campus in Allston. “We don’t feel we can offer...

Author: By Joseph M. Tartakoff, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Exhibit Showcases Allston Plans | 10/25/2005 | See Source »

...Arctic in second grade, Walters was distressed to learn in 2001 of the Bush administration's plans to drill in ANWR. Her activism began with a letter to Vice President Dick Cheney (she says it was never answered), and took off when her mother happened to see a photo exhibit about the Arctic, and put her daughter in touch with the photographer, Lenny Kolm, who has worked with the Alaska Wilderness League for 13 years hosting slide shows. He told Walters about a 1995 Department of Energy report that under-inflated tires wasted four million gallons of gas every...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Young Conservationist | 10/24/2005 | See Source »

...result the effects of the prints blend together to a much lesser cumulative effect. Displayed on their own, the sub-collections would come closer to achieving a successful historical investigation of society through photography. Taken together they weave a telescopic but diluted collage of modern society. The exhibit “A New Kind of Historical Evidence: Photographs from the Carpenter Center Collection” will be on display at the Fogg until October 30. —Staff writer Bari M. Schwartz can be reached at bschwar@fas.harvard.edu

Author: By Bari M. Schwartz, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Hidden Treasures at Fogg | 10/20/2005 | See Source »

...delicately sketched Renaissance noblewoman, is a copy of a drawing attributed to Leonardo Da Vinci. At first glance, these two works seem to have little in common.But Stephan Wolohojian, professor of history of art and architecture and a curator of the “Degas at Harvard” exhibit, can point out exactly why these two works are hanging side by side. It’s not simply that both were created by Edgar Degas during a trip to Italy in the 1850s.“He reused the same pose,” Wolohojian explains. The proud posture...

Author: By Lois E. Beckett, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Seeing Degas Through Wolohojian’s Eyes | 10/20/2005 | See Source »

Tuned in to the many ongoing debates on campus, I have been dumbstruck by a spate of opinions that smack of the one thing that each of us probably swore we would never exhibit: old-school snobbery. That’s right, snobbery: the unwarranted and self-congratulatory intellectual snobbery that tries to castigate an entire segment of the student body—athletes, for example—as unworthy and unnecessary to student life, and the snobbery that suggests we are all too important to be bothered with the foolish plebeians who see fit to visit our campus. This...

Author: By Mark A. Adomanis | Title: A Surfeit of Snobbery | 10/18/2005 | See Source »

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