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More daunting than deciding what to wear to the Grammys is figuring out what to say the fifth time in a single evening you have been called to collect one. Such was the plight of ALICIA KEYS, who after running through the requisite urgings to "think outside the box" and "believe in yourself" in her early speeches, admitted to being at a loss for words when accepting her final award. The success of the R.-and-B. newcomer, and the irresistible ways her name could be used in headlines (KEYS TO SUCCESS, KEYS TO VICTORY, etc.), made it easy...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People: Mar. 11, 2002 | 3/11/2002 | See Source »

Call me a fan, but Bono stands out. In the past three years, in talking to politicians, aid workers, activists and United Nations and development-bank officials, I have never heard a single suggestion that the U2 singer was involved with the plight of the world's poor for anything other than genuine concern. In part that's because he has convinced the professionals that he does his homework. It's one thing to hear celebrities talk about "doing something" for a cause. It's quite another to hear a rock star give a lecture on "HIPC conditionality," the terms...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Right Man, Right Time | 3/4/2002 | See Source »

Rock stars tend to cast themselves as emotional savants, folks who feel the plight of vanishing rain forests and anguished Tibetans more acutely than the rest of humanity. Bono's involvement with Africa began in typical celebrity-dilettante fashion. In 1984, U2 took part in Band Aid and Live Aid, Bob Geldof's Ethiopian famine-relief efforts. While many of Live Aid's participants played their sets and moved on to the next cause, Bono and his wife Alison Stewart decided to find out just how bad the African famine was. They traveled to Wello, Ethiopia, and spent six weeks...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Bono | 3/4/2002 | See Source »

...Rock stars tend to cast themselves as emotional savants, folks who feel the plight of vanishing rain forests and anguished Tibetans more acutely than the rest of humanity. Bono's involvement with Africa began in typical celebrity-dilettante fashion. In 1984, U2 took part in Band Aid and Live Aid, Bob Geldof's Ethiopian famine-relief efforts. While many of Live Aid's participants played their sets and moved on to the next cause, Bono and his wife Alison Stewart decided to find out just how bad the African famine was. They traveled to Wello, Ethiopia, and spent six weeks...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Bono's Mission | 3/4/2002 | See Source »

...litany of complaints, as it were, is neither new nor original. Like other students on campus, I am frustrated by the lack of space, the plight of junior faculty denied tenure, the incomparably bad advising system and the stringent restrictions the administration, led by Dean of the College Harry Lewis, has extended over the campus social scene in my four years at Harvard. In short, I feel alienated by an administration that recruited me and my peers on the basis of our intelligence and drive, only to make no good faith effort to understand our concerns about life at this...

Author: By Alex F. Rubalcava, RISKY BUSINESS | Title: Debunking the Senior Gift | 2/27/2002 | See Source »

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