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...gift from Mr. Lemann is just extraordinary because it allows Harvard to establish ties to Brazil and makes sure the exchange of ideas and people will be greater than it has in the past,” Coatsworth said...

Author: By Emily J. Nelson, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Harvard To Open Office in Brazil This Summer | 4/3/2006 | See Source »

...Mr. Lemann’s vision and generosity are moving Harvard to the forefront of U.S. institutions in promoting Brazilian studies and recruiting talented Brazilian students,” Coatsworth wrote...

Author: By Emily J. Nelson, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Harvard To Open Office in Brazil This Summer | 4/3/2006 | See Source »

...answer is, very. The business of the film is to explain why this amiable hunk is being circled by spooky Mr. Goodkat (a tight-lipped Bruce Willis), a wise-guy cop (Stanley Tucci) and two crime lords (Ben Kingsley and Morgan Freeman). To call the film's plot labyrinthine is to understate the case. To say it works out with complete plausibility is to overstate it. Still, the story never runs completely off the rails and is, in any event, just a pretext for a lot of very sharp badinage by Jason Smilovic--a screenwriter who would have been...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Movies: Of Banter and Bullets | 4/2/2006 | See Source »

After making a four-minute statement in the Rose Garden this morning, President Bush wended his way through the Cabinet members arrayed behind him as a television correspondent bellowed, with various others joining in: "Mr. President, did you feel pressure to make staff changes?" The President was grinning noticeably as he ducked back into the Oval Office, as if to say: Let ?em holler! The replacement of Bush?s first chief of staff, Andrew H. Card Jr., with budget director Joshua B. Bolten may foster a badly needed sense of renewal and produce headlines about a shakeup. But this...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: When a White House Shakeup Isn't Really a Shakeup | 3/28/2006 | See Source »

...town. "The President shows up in the Oval Office between quarter of seven and seven o?clock in the morning, and I?m there to greet him," Card said. "One of the greatest privileges that anyone can have in any democracy is to say, 'Good morning, Mr. President.'" He told other audiences that someone had to be sure the President got a haircut regularly, and that someone was him. Bolten may delegate the haircut scheduling. But the President can be confident that his agenda and the White House will continue being steered by a like-minded confidant who was present...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: When a White House Shakeup Isn't Really a Shakeup | 3/28/2006 | See Source »

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