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...interhouse restrictions in Adams House have explained, most persuasively: “Life isn’t always fair,” “Harvard students can’t always get what they want,” “It’s a tough life?? and “Shut the crap...

Author: By The Editors, | Title: DARTBOARD | 3/19/2004 | See Source »

...someone who likes to think of himself as an “academic’s academic,” that’s just fine. Verba relishes his image as the erudite professor type, and is skeptical that his life??s work will ever seep beyond the ivory tower. “I’d like to think it would, but I’m not convinced that it has political payoff...

Author: By Sarah E.F. Milov, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Pen and Paper Revolutionaries: The Academic's Academic | 3/18/2004 | See Source »

Searching for the roots of political inequalities is a life??s mission Verba began in 1963 with The Civic Culture, a book he co-authored with the late Gabriel Almond, a professor emeritus at Stanford when he died two years ago. But it’s not his field of interest that has made Verba a pioneer. To research The Civic Culture, Verba, Almond and their team performed a cross-national survey, a method which would become fundamental to political science. For his second major work, Voice and Equality, Verba surveyed 15,000 Americans. The approach made waves...

Author: By Sarah E.F. Milov, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Pen and Paper Revolutionaries: The Academic's Academic | 3/18/2004 | See Source »

...take this stuff seriously. “Gypsy Market Blues” is the band’s feeble attempt to emulate Dylan-style talking blues and “Bill McCai” is their take on social commentary. Think “A Day in the Life?? as written by a first-grader. For its finale, the Coral give us the 6-minute “Confessions of A.D.D.D.” I guess this is their tribute to jam-rock; unfortunately, the band members are in no position to improvise. The result...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: New Music | 3/12/2004 | See Source »

...points out that Gibson took Jesus’s famous “I am the way, the truth and the life?? quotation—which is not in the passion narrative—and juxtaposed it with the spectacle of the moments just before Jesus’s death on the cross. “In doing so, there’s no religious openness. There’s simply a sense of ‘believe in me,’ or be wrong...

Author: By Annie M. Lowrey, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Passion with a Prof | 3/11/2004 | See Source »

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