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...visitors will also interact with Harvard students through meals, tours of various Harvard buildings and museums, and campus events such as a hockey game and ballroom dance lessons...

Author: By Carolyn A. Sheehan, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Foreign Students Enjoy Cultural Exchange at Harvard | 2/22/2005 | See Source »

This is perhaps because the purpose of the award —whether to honor a brilliant actress sincerely, to allow the Pudding members to interact with a celebrity, or to create publicity for the Hasty Pudding—has never been entirely clear. While the award is certainly a work of levity, it attracts the most serious of thespians. In 1967, Bob Hope was made the first honorary member of the Hasty Pudding (the following year, Paul Newman was officially named Man of the Year). But the award was treated as a joke; The Crimson reported...

Author: By Annie M. Lowrey, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Why Are They Here? | 2/17/2005 | See Source »

Hailing from Baghdad and Basrah, the students were assigned to represent the country of Australia during the UN simulation. They will also get the chance to interact with 2,100 students from over 15 different countries participating in the event...

Author: By Victoria Kim, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Students From Iraq To Attend Model UN | 2/16/2005 | See Source »

Everyone is inclined to lament that outside of the classroom, faculty-student contact is relatively rare, but no one seems to expect otherwise. We interact with faculty members regularly in formal circumstances such as seminars and office hours; a small number of individual students enjoy one-on-one contact as research aides or thesis advisees. But apart from receptions at conferences or panels, there are no other occasions to interact in a more relaxed setting with our professors...

Author: By Alexander Bevilacqua, | Title: You’re Kindly Invited... | 2/11/2005 | See Source »

...interplay of real and imaginary doesn't have to stop at the end of childhood. In her newest research, Taylor is interviewing fiction writers and finding that they interact with their characters in some ways that parallel children's make-believe play. Authors often report that their characters seem to have autonomous lives, dictating their own dialogue, controlling the plot of stories and sometimes refusing to do what the authors ask of them. Some writers maintain personal relationships with characters outside their fictions. Novelist Alice Walker says she lived with her characters for a year while writing The Color Purple...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Power of Make-Believe | 2/7/2005 | See Source »

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