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Their bottles fill the entire common room window which looks out onto the courtyard--acting as an artificial shade--as well as several shelves in the room...

Author: By Elizabeth T. Bangs, | Title: AN UNDERGRADUATE GUIDE TO Interior Decorating | 12/18/1993 | See Source »

Every scene has a rich period look without diminishing the threadbare tawdriness in which Rose and her touring children are forced to live. The cast is a nice mix of high-profile TV faces (Ed Asner and Evening Shade's Michael Jeterin throwaway cameos) and theater veterans (Christine Ebersole as the heart-of-gold stripper Tessie Tura and Anna McNeely reprising her Broadway turn as the rival ecdysiast Miss Electra...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Bette Comes Up Roses | 12/13/1993 | See Source »

...addictive is this ploy that the fact of blackness has been abandoned for the theory of blackness. It doesn't matter anymore what shade the newcomer's skin is. A hostile posture toward resident blacks must be struck at the Americanizing door before it will open. The public is asked to accept American blacks as the common denominator in each conflict between an immigrant and a job or between a wannabe and status. It hardly matters what complexities, contexts and misinformation accompany these conflicts. They can all be subsumed as the equation of brand X vs. blacks...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: On the Backs of Blacks | 12/2/1993 | See Source »

...Darker Shade of Crimson details Navarrette's life from the moment his Harvard acceptance letter arrives at his house in Sanger, California. Navarrette describes a feeling of belittlement when confronted by peers and high school faculty who carelessly and sometimes innocently inferred that he was accepted only because of his ethnicity. Upon arriving at Harvard, Navarrette found himself in an alien environment. He was shocked by the transition from dry and sunny California to wet and dreary New England, as well as the change from a community that is predominantly Mexican-American (70% of the population) to one where Chicanos...

Author: By Christopher J. Hernandez, | Title: Darker Memories of Harvard For One Mexican American | 11/18/1993 | See Source »

Navarrette's publishers have attempted to emphasize his taste for controversy, portraying his book as a piece of Harvard-bashing literature by a sour alum. In A Darker Shade of Crimson, Navarrette criticizes Harvard for forcing him into "playing the role" of a token minority student. He also claims that the University could do more for its minority students by including adding a Chicano studies major and recognizing that Mexican-American students feel alienated in a unique...

Author: By Christopher J. Hernandez, | Title: Darker Memories of Harvard For One Mexican American | 11/18/1993 | See Source »

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