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...committees must not only examine the interaction between concentrations, but also the inner workings of the concentrations themselves. The massive economics, government and biochemical sciences are the most problematic. Not only do students get lost, but faculty find it easier to dodge their advising, administrative and teaching responsibilities. What is more, often these umbrella concentrations serve merely as clearing houses for widely different academic fields. In the government faculty, for instance, political scientists have been estranged from political theorists for decades, and American civics professors rarely exchange words with those teaching international relations. Whether it comes from further subdivision...

Author: By The CRIMSON Staff, | Title: Curricular Transformation | 6/4/2003 | See Source »

...title character, a retired insurance actuary, is saved from aimlessness and depression by his connection through a charity to a child in Africa. "That little thread of contact with a child outside was also Schmidt's child inside," says Rosen. When it comes to exploring, through therapy, what that inner voice might be saying, however, many men consider such an approach "unmanly," Rosen says...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: O.K., Now What? | 6/2/2003 | See Source »

...serious newspaper. As has been reported elsewhere in these pages, he would respond—sometimes at great length—to e-mail inquiries of all sorts, at all hours. He didn’t always tell us what we wanted to know (particularly about the inner workings of the Ad Board), but he would tell us quite directly that he was unwilling to share the information and why. If we got something wrong, we heard about it; when we got something particularly right, we heard about that too. Regarding issues on which reasonable people could disagree, he seemed...

Author: By Susannah B. Tobin, | Title: A Worthy Adversary | 6/2/2003 | See Source »

...hijacked plane crashing into the World Trade Center. And the two main Palme d'Or contenders showed how the world could end in America: with a bang. Dogville - like Von Trier's best-known films, Breaking the Waves and Dancer in the Dark - is a parable of inner beauty defiled, except that, this time, the heroine gets to kill all her attackers. The film was also labeled anti-American, because that's today's fragrance. But Von Trier is mainly a cinema experimentalist, and Dogville is another of his clever ideas stretched to the breaking point. He resolved to make...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: It's a Lovely Day in Cannes And Life Is Rotten | 6/1/2003 | See Source »

...many ways, behind the screen as well as on it, Nemo is a find-your-inner-grownup story. For a decade, Stanton was pleased to assist--as writer and co-director--the charismatic Lasseter, who created the first Pixar shorts and masterminded the art of CGI storytelling. "We all think John is the best thing since sliced bread," he avers, "and we'll follow his lead anywhere." But Stanton honed and hoarded his Nemo idea before pitching it to his Pixar pals. "Part of it was ego," he acknowledges. "Here I am making these movies with these four or five...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Hook, Line and Thinker | 5/26/2003 | See Source »

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