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...grab-bag adjective new age doesn't even begin to embrace it. No, this is beyond that, this display arrayed before anyone taking a stroll down the midway at the "Whole Life Expo," the country's largest and most successful holistic fair, which packed more than 20,000 souls into an arena in Austin, Texas, last week and is on its way to a city near...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: WHOLE LIFE EXPO: IS MY AURA SHOWING? | 10/20/1997 | See Source »

...megavitamins, grab those acupuncture needles and call your psychic healer--now is the time to visualize your way toward a state of perfect health and to realize that the power of suggestion still remains one of the most fundamental components of the delicate art of medicine and modern therapeutics. If you think sugar pills and saline injections are no longer in vogue, look no further than Harvard History of Science professor Anne Harrington's The Placebo Effect: An Interdisciplinary Exploration for a panoramic view of the current proliferation and efficacy of the humble sugar pill's descendents...

Author: By Andrea H. Kurtz, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Just a Spoonful of Sugar | 10/17/1997 | See Source »

Outdoor activity becomes a distant memory when the dark, icy days of December are here. Most Harvard people hole up inside like hibernating bears during the winter, venturing out once in a while to slip and slide their way to class or grab a pizza at Tommy...

Author: By Chris W. Mcevoy, | Title: Phenomonal Fall Foliage Found for All | 10/15/1997 | See Source »

President Kennedy: I think it is more likely he would just grab [Allied-occupied West] Berlin...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ARMAGEDDON'S ECHOES | 10/13/1997 | See Source »

...these 12 miniatures must have appealed to the amply-repertoired Pollini, who has recorded both Mozart and Stockhausen for Deutsche Grammophon. His technique was particularly well-suited to the fierce leaps and skips of the third prelude, "The Wind of the Plain." It was equally fun to watch him grab fistfuls of notes with such glorious abandon in "The Hills of Anacapri," the ending of which seemed contrived by Debussy to recall the final arpeggio of the earlier "Gardens in the Rain" from his "Estampes." Pollini's mastery of Lisztian technique was evident in the whirling "What the West Wind...

Author: By Matthew A. Carter, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Pollini Delivers Populist Agenda | 10/10/1997 | See Source »

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