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...three words, describe the ideal president of Harvard. JR: [Long pause.] I would say: visionary, broadly-educated—if I can count that as one word—and [pause] responsive. FM: And three words to describe President Summers? JR: Oh, that’s kind of mean. FM: Fair enough. I’ll ask another mean one. What is most annoying about President Summers? JR: I suppose it’s a certain impatience he has that’s most annoying. But I don’t think that’s at the heart...

Author: By Sam Teller, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Fifteen Questions With Judith Ryan | 2/15/2006 | See Source »

...Drawing from scholarly research by P. M. Taylor, the main difference between art and propaganda is not that hard to spot: the first does not advance any particular course of action to change the status quo. The latter, on the other hand, presents a problem and also the supposedly ideal behavior for audiences to follow...

Author: By Pierpaolo Barbieri | Title: Fish, Planes, and Globalization | 2/13/2006 | See Source »

Sauper, however, masterfully resists the temptation to which other good filmmakers often give in: he does not provide any ideal solution, enlightened path, or Messiah-like revelation. One-hundred seven minutes of hard-to-digest reality rapidly come to an end. But as artistic masterpieces ought to do, it will keep any viewer thinking for a long time to come: about fish, about globalization, and about what each of us can do. In Sauper’s own words, he merely “gets some brains boiling.” By avoiding the dangers of propaganda and staying...

Author: By Pierpaolo Barbieri | Title: Fish, Planes, and Globalization | 2/13/2006 | See Source »

...solid acting. The cast looks wonderful, but there is little substance. Additionally, while the Italian Riviera is a wonderful setting, the film’s color scheme is so dreadfully dreary that you begin to fervently believe that there simply must be sinister doings afoot—hardly the ideal setting for frivolity and wit. Johansson and Hunt give tepid performances, to say the very least. Johansson, playing the stereotypically naïve Midwestern girl, is insufferably proud of herself. Her American accent jars horrendously with the smooth delivery of the British actors, and she spends so much...

Author: By Alexandra M. Fallows, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: A Good Woman | 2/9/2006 | See Source »

...sites in Cambridge. About fifteen places turned them down, fearing that the installation of such a large project would damage their property. Additionally, Godfrey decided not to explore a few options where he thought the work would be associated with a particular corporation. Therefore, Pamplona seemed to be an ideal spot—an offbeat, well-traveled cultural landmark in Cambridge, with a unique interstitial plot, well-suited to Godfrey’s inventions. “Not only does it have those formal characteristics, but also the history of Café Pamplona in Cambridge doubles [the effect...

Author: By Alexandra N. Atiya, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Godfrey Takes Art to the Streets | 2/9/2006 | See Source »

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