Word: grasse
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...side of the Design School facing Memorial Hall so hideously ugly? This is a design school, for Chrissakes. Fortunately, Calla Lilly is located on the back corner of the nice side. The glass windows, which comprise two of the walls and the ceiling, offers a nice view of green grass. Nibble on a fresh mozzarella sandwich and ponder Harvard’s strange fascination with concrete. It’s true that pretty much anything goes with gray, but in the spring a little more color would be nice. Inside, Calla Lilly is rather drab, with little...
...line of about 30 students trail ahead of Redd as a student on the grass pounds a drum. They have donned masks made of white paper plates, white shirts and ties. Some of them hold a sign that reads, “Where is the diversity at our university?” Isaac J. Weiler ’02-’03, president of the Black Men’s Forum, stands on top of a bench and hollers his support, hands cupped around his mouth. The protesters stop in front of University Hall, in every tourist?...
With this funding, Stein’s grass-roots effort—which spent less than $15,000 in March—would receive a considerable boost...
...small pond blowing on a long pipe which gently curves upward; it is suspended without the use of his hands, instead propped up at its wider end by a pole that extends from the water. Around the faded, sepia-like tones of the photograph rise okra-colored stalks of grass from the marsh; the glow of the sun can be faintly seen from the horizon in the distance. The image maintains a surreal and ethereal levity, and the inaudible music of the pipe calls out to us as might the Islamic call to prayer...
...suspended naked man floats in the center of “Untitled (Blake Man)” with the falling dusk in the background; a faint orange glow on the sand and grass in the distance and reflected on the lake below serves as a reminder of the fading sun. A feather is wrapped with a cloth around his head and a miniature wing emerges from the small of his back—yet it seems all too insignificant an apparatus to allow such defiance of gravity, and the picture reminds us of Icarus’ tragic tale. His hand...