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Math Club Social Chair James A. Fowler ’03 created the flyer, which detailed various facts about pi, including the mathematical logic behind the ratio’s “irrational” and “transcendental” nature...

Author: By Hera A. Abbasi, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Math Club Members Honor Pi and Eat It, Too | 3/17/2003 | See Source »

...Fowler said his efforts to promote pi were successful...

Author: By Hera A. Abbasi, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Math Club Members Honor Pi and Eat It, Too | 3/17/2003 | See Source »

...QUIET AMERICAN. Director Philip Noyce’s adaptation of the 1956 Graham Greene novel stars Oscar-nominated Michael Caine as Thomas Fowler, the middle-aged London Times foreign correspondent covering the French-Indochina war in Saigon. Fowler, who lives in Vietnam with a beautiful ex-taxi dancer named Phuong (Do Thi Hai Yen), finds this lifestyle imperiled when a young American doctor, Alden Pyle (Brendan Fraser), falls in love with Phuong and tries to wrest her away. As the eponymous “quiet American,” Pyle is rather the opposite—his naive idealism...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Listings, February 28-March 6 | 2/28/2003 | See Source »

...Times of London correspondent in Saigon at the time the French are retreating from Vietnam and the Americans are coming in, full of bravado and a species of idealism. Fowler, with his Vietnamese mistress (Do Thi Hai Yen) and his fondness for opium, is the resident sage and cynic. The subversive tactics of an American friend (Brendan Fraser) stir him to make a fatal decision for reasons both noble and venal...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Movies: Praising Caine | 2/24/2003 | See Source »

Caine lends Fowler the weariness and wariness of an old lion reminding itself how to roar, and the pathos of a lover driven to humiliate his mistress and himself. "I knew Graham Greene," he says, "and I knew he had a Vietnamese girlfriend. So I used his accent and his attitudes--very upper middle class--for Fowler. I was playing an alter ego of Graham's: his Mr. Hyde to his Dr. Jekyll." As Fowler's shadings turn darker, Caine paints him with stronger strokes. It was an exhausting process. "Every Friday night I'd have dinner with my wife...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Movies: Praising Caine | 2/24/2003 | See Source »

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