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...Nieman fellows who work as writers, reporters or correspondents include Bill Graves of The Oregonian; Sandra King of New Jersey Public Television; Christopher Marquis of The Washington Herald; Suzanne Sataline of The Philadelphia Inquirer; Lily Galili of Ha'aretz in Jerusalem; Dimitri Mitropolous of To Vima in Athens; Frans Roennovof the Berlingske Tidende in Copenhagen, Denmark;Gonzalo Quijandria of Andina de Radiodifusion inLima, Peru and freelance writer Susan E. Reed...

Author: By Andres A. Ramos, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Journalists Selected As New Nieman Fellows | 5/15/1998 | See Source »

Many of us have had similar experiences--standard reactions to admitted Harvard undergraduate status seem to include: the impromptu vocabulary quiz, the "Wow, you must be really smart," and, for the comedian, the "Is it hard work there? Ha, ha," and the "Harvard? Never heard of it, ha, ha.' "If I had a nickel for every time somebody said, 'Oh, I've heard of that...'" adds Lidsky...

Author: By Pam Wasserstein, | Title: On the Town | 4/24/1998 | See Source »

...might've thought you were finally rid of him when STP ditched him to go on to greatness with...Talk Show. Well, he's back, with his own album, 12 Bar Blues, the joke being that the album is nothing like 12 bar blues, ha-ha. Let the record run through your CD player once, and the first word most likely to jump into your head...

Author: By Josiah J. Madigan, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Scott Weiland Offers his Version of Heroin Chic | 4/17/1998 | See Source »

...Hawaii club will feature a "Make-your-own-sushi" workshop at noon tomorrow, alongside performances by the Jo Ha Hyu Performance Group and the Harvard Radcliffe Chado Society...

Author: By Jie Li, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Japanese Culture, Politics To Blend At ECJAL Conference This Weekend | 4/3/1998 | See Source »

...Ha-ha, we're not going to be annihilated after all, crowed the TV newsies in their irritating way. Seems the scientists had miscalculated. A bunch of astronomers announced that the space slab's going to miss us by a good 600,000 miles. This letdown came the day after another bunch of astronomers (who had apparently paid less attention in high school trigonometry class) announced a miss of approximately 30,000 lousy miles, which left open the possibility of a good, solid creaming should a tailwind or something come along at the right moment. How depressing...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Upside Of Doom | 3/23/1998 | See Source »

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