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...main focus of attention will be Russia itself: a Russia awash in oil money and emboldened by it, becoming less free at home and more assertive abroad, in ways that have increasingly disappointed and worried leaders who used to talk of a "strategic partnership" but now fear, as one scholar recently put it, that "Russia is leaving the West." The George W. Bush who in 2001 said of Putin that "I looked the man in the eye ? I was able to get a sense of his soul" and "found him to be very straightforward and trustworthy," sent Vice President Dick...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Russia's New World Order | 7/2/2006 | See Source »

...have entered a Safeway supermarket in Berkeley, Calif., and this noted scholar of American nutrition can't make head or tail of the place. "Very unusual--not very inviting," she sniffs, eyeing checkout counters that seem to pose a barrier to entry. "Where's the produce?" It is then that we realize we have come in via the exit. We re-enter through the correct door, and at once the layout conforms to the immutable laws of grocery-store geometry. The colorful produce and flowers pull us into a world of plenty. Now Nestle is in her element. An N.Y.U...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Decoding the Grocery Store | 6/11/2006 | See Source »

...across the Atlantic, and so in London in 1643 there appeared “New England’s First Fruits”—“the first of countless public relations pamphlets and brochures,” according to Clarke L. Caywood, a public relations scholar at Northwestern University. The 26-page brochure extols Harvard’s first president, Henry Dunster: “Over the Colledge is master Dunster placed, as President, a learned, conscionable and industrious man, who hath so trained up his Pupills in the tongues and Arts, and so seasoned them...

Author: By Anton S. Troianovski, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Calibrating the Public Relations Machine | 6/7/2006 | See Source »

...easy to do, especially on the first try.ONE DOWN, MORE TO GOLying amidst her backpacks from a recent trip to the Oral History Center she co-founded in Kenya, Elkins’ Pulitzer is not a crowning achievement but further testament to her mantra of hard work: The scholar is cranking out a sophomore publication that will examine the fall of the British Empire after the Second World War from the periphery.The Kenyan government honored her in a reception during Elkins’ latest visit to Kenya, but she knows that her storytelling provokes plenty of not-so-celebratory reflection...

Author: By Lulu Zhou, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Out of Africa—But Headed Back | 6/7/2006 | See Source »

...Class of 1981, the first weeks of spring came in a blaze.A local Vietnamese immigrant attempted to set a visiting scholar on fire in late April. When the Margaret Full House went up in flames the following fall, a member of its board of directors blamed neighborhood terrorists. And one local teenager set fire to Harvard Stadium in the closing days of the ’81 school year.Most of the stadium’s massive concrete amphitheater was left unharmed, but the arsonist found easy kindling in the wooden press box. The ancient structure had played home to decades...

Author: By M. AIDAN Kelly, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Vandalism and Politics Bring the Heat | 6/5/2006 | See Source »

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