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...Wasserman ’10, skillfully bend conventions to make viewers reconsider their perceptions of popular culture and art. Wasserman’s piece is a mixed-media re-invention of the frivolous, gossip-hungry magazine “US Weekly.” By altering parts of the magazine??s text and inserting opposing images, Wasserman creates poignant juxtapositions. One page, entitled “Puttin’ on the Glitz” shows a photograph of red carpet-ready Eva Longoria and the following text: “Iraqi citizen, it condemned Dell’Acqua...
...Bomb—the student-produced, Harvard sex magazine??made national headlines when it debuted in the spring of 2004, but after nearly three years and only two issues, the magazine is now struggling with financial difficulties...
Listen up, potential investment bankers: all work and no play makes for a lousy sex life, according to a new Harvard Business Review study. The study, published in the magazine??s December issue, polled high-earning professionals with “extreme” jobs to examine how their work affected their private lives. The results showed that roughly half of those polled felt that their work interferes with a satisfying sex life, and 46 percent said their job negatively impacted their spousal relationships. An “extreme job,” by definition, involved working...
...Larry Summers, Gap CEO Paul Pressler, and personal computer mogul Michael Dell all have in common? Pressler may be better dressed, and Dell, with a net worth estimated at $17.1 billion, is a whole lot wealthier than the former Harvard president. But all three men have made BusinessWeek magazine??s “worst of” 2006 list. In its current issue, the weekly says Summers, who jumped from Treasury secretary in the Clinton White House to the top job at Mass. Hall, is the “worst crossover” of the year. Dell, whose...
When James D. Watson, co-discoverer of DNA’s structure and one of TIME Magazine??s 100 Most Important People of the Century, stopped into a MCB 52, “Molecular Biology,” lecture last week, students knew it would be no ordinary class. But the father of their field turned out to be even more interesting—and contentious—than they had expected. Watson, who is now 78, began his short talk by reminiscing about the illustrator of the class’s textbook, “Molecular Biology...