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...important, and that it’s Harvard’s global reach that matters. This argument ignores the vast diversity of experiences and views of people within North America. Whether you come from a rural or urban area, a conservative or a liberal enclave, and so on??your culture affects your outlook on life. It’s valuable to meet people with diverse experiences—perhaps even more valuable for the streetwise New Yorker to meet a “backwards” Iowan than to meet a cosmopolitan Londoner...
...musician. There he wrote and performed a new song every day. This persistence led him to a recording contract, and he relocated to Los Angeles, where he pragmatically capitalized on every opportunity he came across. “A lot of people are very precious of what they work on??I fully respect that. I was working up to improving my skills and learning how to first write the song,” he said. After working as a music producer and penning a few successful songs for TV (including the theme to “Who?...
...turn of the century, Harvard’s Natural History Museum decided it needed its own faux dodo, according to Trimble, who manages the bird collection in the Museum of Comparative Zoology. And there it has stayed for the past hundred years, an avian imposter.But the bird lives on??in the genetic material Harvard researchers recently extracted from the London dodo carcass. Their analysis? Genetically speaking, “It’s basically a big fat pigeon,” said Berry, who co-authored the book “DNA: The Secret of Life?...
...costumes.” Those looking for more everyday duds can head to the appropriately named Proletariat, which caters mostly to male clientele. The decor is skateboarder dorm-room style, and the clothes have that “I just rolled out of bed and threw this old thing on?? sort of look—in a good way. Owner Kerry Simon, a master of this affordable style, originally had two stores in Texas before setting up shop in Cambridge in 2003. “Every shirt is different and unique,” he says...
...first night game in Crimson history wasn’t short on excitement or atmosphere—or scoring, early on??but in the end, the 18,898 fans in attendance were treated to what both head coaches called a “typical” Harvard-Brown game...