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Other dramatic ventures take place in the Underground Theater, located in the Whitman Basement (contact Susan Livingston, slivings@fas.harvard.edu) The Cabot Drama Society also honors Dr. Seuss at an annual Grinch reading...

Author: By Madeline K. Ross, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Artists in Residence | 3/3/2005 | See Source »

Other Cabot House facilities include a Dance Studio (Cabotians can make reservations with Livingston), an Art Studio (welcoming budding artists of all levels—from stick figure Picassos to future Pollocks), and a fully-equipped Dark Room (annual fee, Cabotians only) located in the basement directly under the JCR. For questions, email slivings@fas.harvard.edu...

Author: By Madeline K. Ross, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Artists in Residence | 3/3/2005 | See Source »

...says Conrad B. Cazalas, 58, an electrician from Corpus Christi, Texas, sitting in Essider's dining hall in blue jeans and work boots. Days after U.S. officials ordered him out in 1986, Cazalas says, he called his Libyan colleagues and talked his way back into his old job. Darrell Livingston, 51, from Winter Haven, Florida, who works on Essider's metering equipment, says he was once detained by federal agents after arriving home and asked to inform for them in Libya. Livingston says he rejected their offer but kept his job, even filing yearly U.S. tax returns listing his overseas...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Libya's New Face | 1/2/2005 | See Source »

...says Conrad B. Cazalas, 58, an electrician from Corpus Christi, Texas, sitting in Essider's dining hall in blue jeans and work boots. Days after U.S. officials ordered him out in 1986, Cazalas says, he called his Libyan colleagues and talked his way back into his old job. Darrell Livingston, 51, from Winterhaven, Fla., who works on Essider's metering equipment, says he was once detained by federal agents after arriving home and asked to inform for them in Libya. Livingston says he rejected their offer but kept his job, even filing yearly U.S. tax returns listing his overseas residence...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Libya's New Face | 11/22/2004 | See Source »

Libya's oil industry will need many more Americans if it is to reach its potential. "Everyone's waiting for the Americans to come back in with huge amounts of money," says Livingston. "A lot of infrastructure needs to be rebuilt." At the Waha oil field, hundreds of miles into the Sahara from Essider's harbor, the production lines are monitored from a computer room equipped with the defunct Data General's 1982 system. "I'd say we're at least 15 years behind in technology," explains Gordon Snowdon, 55, a Briton in charge of production at the oil field...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Libya's New Face | 11/22/2004 | See Source »

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