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...Winter 1999 edition of the Harvard- Radcliffe Parents Newsletter, Dean Harry Lewis addressed parents on the issue of choosing a concentration. Lewis's piece, "A Message from the Dean: On Concentrations," appears on the front cover of the newsletter with an inset photograph of the dean. Lewis, apparently with a concentration problem of his own, submitted the academic blunder which read as follows...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: As Follows | 3/18/1999 | See Source »

...Winter 1999 edition of the Harvard-Radcliffe Parents Newsletter, Dean Harry Lewis addressed parents on the issue of choosing a concentration. Lewis's piece, "A Message from the Dean: On Concentrations," appears on the front cover of the newsletter with an inset photograph of the dean. Lewis, apparently with a concentration problem of his own, submitted the academic blunder which read as follows...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: as follows: | 3/18/1999 | See Source »

TIMOTHY GREENFIELD-SANDERS, who recently won a Grammy for his documentary on rocker Lou Reed, had a different sort of star to photograph in Monica Lewinsky. Greenfield-Sanders, who is known for his elegant portraits, shot our cover story and the cover of her book, Monica's Story. How do you approach "that woman"? By treating Lewinsky to breakfast before the shoot. He was struck by "how genuinely funny...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Contributors: Mar. 15, 1999 | 3/15/1999 | See Source »

Another pleasing intersection of technology and art is Cooper Union student Clay Zimmerman's photograph of a large home sitting behind a highway. The house is illuminated, orange and bright, while the highway is dark, a thought-provoking color contrast reminiscent of Rene Magritte's eerie painting, "The Empire of the Light." For Zimmerman, technology is not only a tool, but also a subject: the house is nearly dwarfed by two satellite dishes, creating a juxtaposition of homey architecture and lonely telecommunications, all dramatically illuminated with highway and house lights...

Author: By Marcelline M.block, CRIMSON ARTS STAFF | Title: Advocating NYC: Give My Regards to Color | 3/12/1999 | See Source »

Continuing with the theme of bold illumination is Harvard senior Hitomi Nakao's photograph of a naked woman seemingly bathed in the swirling light of a projector. This photograph, although darkly colored and almost confusing, radiates warmth and sensuality. Indeed, this nude is much more striking than Nakao's other nude photo series, in which a woman is photographed close-up from several different angles. The woman bathed in projected light is more a statement than an exploration, asserting the compatibility of the body and technology...

Author: By Marcelline M.block, CRIMSON ARTS STAFF | Title: Advocating NYC: Give My Regards to Color | 3/12/1999 | See Source »

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