Word: printings
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While you wonder whether your Peter Griffin poster matches your Starry Night print, some freshmen have been putting up wallpaper. H. Hai Pham ’09, Baruch Y. Shemtov ’08, Davone J. Tines ’09, and Matthew T. McClure ’09 see their suite as a long-term decorating project—from the rug to the light fixtures. The common room, decked out in black, white, and orange, has a deliberately “bold, graphic theme,” explains Shemtov. A zebra-striped shower curtain and framed zebra prints...
...rape, for crimes alleged to have been committed by their kinsmen.This is all to say that those pervasive stereotypes are premised in reality, and their largest promoters are not campus publications like The Salient, but Muslim leaders committing and condoning barbarous acts in the name of Islam. Critics in print and on e-mail lists have claimed that The Salient represents a broad trend to demonize Islam in American society. I beg to differ. As the reaction to our parody amply demonstrates, any assertion that women in the Islamic world do enjoy fewer rights than their Western counterparts...
...lawsuit against Google on Tuesday for the search engine’s practice of digitally scanning copyrighted works from several libraries, including Harvard’s, without the publisher’s permission.The AAP’s filing is the second lawsuit this fall against Google and its Print Library Project, which scans volumes at Harvard, the University of Michigan, Stanford University, Oxford University, and the New York Public Library. The Authors Guild, a society of published authors, also filed a copyright lawsuit last month.With its lawsuit, the AAP is seeking a declaratory judgment from the court about the interpretation...
...collecting dust like most of the university’s gathering in a Harvard depository. Hidden from tourists and casual museum-goers only interested in the celebrity of Van Gogh’s self-portrait and the Bernini sketch collection, the photography is surprisingly compelling, with emotionally raw prints that compose a time capsule of social changes and events of the 20th century. Portraits of children cringing at their first haircut, tuxedo-clad men diving head first into a fountain, an elderly couple standing by their piano and women gathered at a ball evoke a voyeuristic glimpse into the lives...
CORRECTION: The print and original online version of the Oct. 20, 2005 news article, "Stalled Review Inches Ahead," incorrectly stated that the Curricular Review's Educational Policy Committee (EPC) would release a new report that day, and that the Advising Committee would re-release a copy of the same report it originally released last May. In fact, the EPC released its report on Oct. 21 and the Advising Committee does not plan to re-release a copy of its May report...