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...drawings, which historians say may be the most important Galileo find in more than a century, are in a specimen of Galileo's volume that had long been secreted away in the collection of an anonymous South American. At the request of New York-based rare-books dealer Richard Lan, who now owns it, Bredekamp and his associates examined the drawings over the course of two years, dating paper and ink and comparing brushstrokes with other known Galileo sketches. Bredekamp believes that Galileo, who was overseeing the printing of Sidereus Nuncius, drew the moons on the pages of a proof...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Galileo's Moon View | 8/16/2007 | See Source »

...There are plenty of guys who are good sports,” Crimson coach Dave Fish ’72 said, “but Gideon plays with élan. He’s a real sportsman. He always plays with passion, but without the ugly side...

Author: By Jonathan B. Steinman, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Crimson Players Compete Against Legends | 5/15/2007 | See Source »

...panel entitled “Dreams, Sex, Dust: Three Vietnamese American Writers.” Novelist Gish Jen ’77 moderated the April 12 event together with Cabot Professor of English Literature and Professor of African and African American Studies Werner Sollors. Essayist Andrew Lam, performance artist Lan Tran, and poet Truong Tran all presented readings to the audience gathered in Ticknor Lounge. Sollors provided opening remarks and introduced the first reading, Andrew Lam’s “Child of Two Worlds,” an angst-ridden autobiographical sketch of the author?...

Author: By Alison S. Cohn, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Angst from Vietnamese Writers | 4/20/2007 | See Source »

...workers and their unions that they had everything to gain as partners with management and everything to lose as adversaries. In France? Bonne chance. Yet Air France employees are less grumpy campers (they're still French), and the company is reaping the rewards of labor peace and French lan in the skies. The notoriously dysfunctional bad boy of air transport earned $1.2 billion in the fiscal year that ended in March 2006, on sales of $28.2 billion, and $1.62 billion for the first three-quarters of the current one, an increase of 31%. Those results have been built...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Air France: Climbing | 3/8/2007 | See Source »

...once was. As recently as five years ago, many wealthy Vietnamese officials took pains to disguise their net worth; they rode motorbikes to work and turned assets into gold bars that were hidden in their modest homes. "Society was not in favor of rich people," says Pham Chi Lan, an economist in Hanoi. "They did not dare expose their wealth." Today, BMWs and Mercedes are frequently seen on the streets of Hanoi, and there's a construction boom of luxury villas. The annual publication of a list of the country's richest people seems like just another capitalist milestone...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Spoils of Capitalism | 2/22/2007 | See Source »

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