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...outlook on this particular set of pieces compared to her usual style. “Most of the time it’s impulsive and unplanned, and influenced by the availability of the tools around,” she says. “That’s how things result, not out of any intention or self-awareness of being an artist, but because of the immediacy and availability of the tool.”Hays—who has worked in Harvard art museums and the Carpenter Center, helped create VES thesis films, and designed for Harvard fashion shows?...
...number of homeless individuals in Cambridge has increased by almost 10 percent over the past two years, according to 2008 homeless census results released by Cambridge last week. However, these numbers do not necessarily correlate with escalating economic problems in Cambridge, said Fred Berman, the census’ coordinator. The 487 homeless persons counted by city census workers in January 2008 marks a 55 person increase from 2007, due mostly to a seven percent increase in homeless families living in Cambridge shelters. Berman said that the increase in homelessness is mostly a result of the beginning of a new transitional...
Miller came to Harvard for theater. More precisely, he came to Harvard because they had no theater major and, he presumed, less theater politics as a result. After witnessing an alum’s films about Africa at his high school, Miller arrived with an aim to pursue...
...four years. Schreier admits that upon arriving at Harvard she was a “bun-head,” or a very traditional dancer, but says her time here has allowed her to develop a greater appreciation for modern dance. Her style of choreography has evolved as a result of this appreciation. Classical and modern are “two completely different aesthetics, two completely different forms of movement,” Schreier says. “I need both at this point in my life.” “The amount of sheer star power that?...
...Peter Moskos, a professor at the City University of New York, obtained special permission from the Baltimore Police Department to serve as a policeman for one year, and “Cop in the Hood” is the result. His book offers an intensely personal perspective on the hopelessness of city life, revealed through his experiences with Baltimore drug traffickers, addicts, and police officers. In “Cop,” Moskos is able to take a real hard look at drug crime in America and find human beings in that hardscrabble world...