Word: supplemental
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...thing." To most people, of course, a hole in the ground remains a hole in the ground. Who would ever think of it as a negative cube? Only a conceptual artist like Claes Oldenburg, who delights in the play of the mind above all, in the thousand fantasies that supplement his visual riddles...
...editors for the Supplement were Jay Cantor and John G. Short. The photo editor was Ronald H. Janis. The interview on pages 7 and 8 was transcribed by Laura R. Benjamin. The chart of "Your Life etc." was created by John G. Short; James A. Rivaldo drew the figures for it. The photos on page 2 were taken by Tom Shook. The one on page 3 was taken by Ronald H. Janus. The cover, on page 1, was written by Jay Cantor...
...help you attain enlightenment is the point of this supplement. To help you, and to warn you of the obstacles facing serious seekers after truth. For not only does our false linear cause and effect way of thinking promote illusion, but people are actively trying to keep you from becoming one with the universe. They try to use you for their own ends, to control you. They use machines to run your life (pg.2). They use newspapers to promote false ways of thinking (pg.3 and the front page of today's Crimson). They have ads to make you do what...
...tattered and forlorn can smile today. They can roll up their floppy manuscripts, cram them into their hip pockets, troop over to lehman Hall, and read the CRIMSON Supplement with a Seraphic twinkle in their eyes. Scurry around for it if it's not with your usual Harvard CRIMSON, and read...
Here's a message for the worn and haggard, the wretched sleepless legions who play pinball until their thumbs are numb and even that game loses its meaning. Not only does somebody love you people, but they want to talk to you. Tomorrow. In the CRIMSON Supplement, which is something that comes free with the Harvard CRIMSON if you just remember to look...