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...effortless speak-singing that made his greatest hits so poignant. Best of all is a closing minor-key version of Amazing Grace; Nelson and Adams add an Animals-like organ to this most clichéd of spirituals and take it on a trip to the House of the Rising Sun...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: 5 Albums from Country's Classiest Acts | 11/5/2006 | See Source »

...long as we’re tossing out trite clichĂ©s, remember this one: There’s nothing new under the sun. Neither this cartoon theme, nor this problem is original to your cartoonist...

Author: By Joey Reed | Title: Nothing Illegitimate About Cartoonist’s Work | 11/3/2006 | See Source »

Smith: We went in at dusk when the sun was just setting and the light was coming through. Watching them open the dome up I thought about how it was such an impressive sight. People don’t tend to think of telescopes or large mechanical structures as interesting or as beautiful, but seeing the how massive it was, standing nearby thousands of tons of steel, I wanted to capture how impressive it is to look up at that at twilight...

Author: By Anna K. Barnet, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: SPOTLIGHT: Julia E. Rozier ’08, Jason Pan ‘09, Matt W. Smith '07 | 11/2/2006 | See Source »

...Cosmic Connections” heartthrob and member of the Harvard Origins of Life Initiative, answered FM’s rather-forward question. Let’s see. I would say that seven billion years ago a previous star that was the ancestor of the sun went through a supernova dispersing its newly-formed elements into the galaxy, and then the protostellar cloud that would later become the sun collapsed out of this material, and planets formed around that newly formed star, and those elements are the stuff of which we’re made today. That?...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Hey, Professor Charbonneau, how did your life begin? | 11/1/2006 | See Source »

...Actually, it's still only a small percentage of Indian women who can afford moisturizer, toner and sun bleach. But with a population of 1.1 billion, even a small percentage adds up to a lot of people. And that number is growing every year, which is why, Sekhri says, "it's only the start of the boom." If you tally up turnover in the television, radio, publishing, film, music and advertising industries, India's media market is currently worth some $8 billion a year. But PricewaterhouseCoopers reckons that will grow to $19 billion in the next five years...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Five Pounds of Cosmo | 10/31/2006 | See Source »

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