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...immensely popular family-owned grocery store. What’s the problem with these types of businesses? It’s a ripple effect. “There are certain uses [of space] that can deactivate, rather than activate, an area,” says Williams Professor of Urban Planning and Design Jerold S. Kayden ’75, who has studied Harvard social space (see “The Space Scientist,” page 16). “Areas that may be deemed important are given over to inert uses.”As the Square continued...

Author: By Aria S.K. Laskin, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: How the Square Got So Square | 10/12/2005 | See Source »

...strongest selling points was its location. In the center of ever-so-liberal Cambridge and just a stone’s throw from Boston, this university is uniquely positioned to take advantage of not one, but two of North America’s most culturally vibrant urban centers. My imagination bubbled over with fantasies of stress-free afternoons in independent coffee shops, far away from the stress, work, and worry of Harvard College.As one can well imagine, my arrival here constituted a bit of a rude awakening.Early in my freshman year, extracurricular commitments began to conflict with each other...

Author: By Adam Goldenberg, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: My Great Escape | 10/12/2005 | See Source »

...time, not all '60s beliefs and behavior stood up to examination. Some sacred texts were junk. (Have you tried to read Frantz Fanon's The Wretched of the Earth lately? Don't.) And when, in Germany and Italy, the street politics of the 1960s gave way to the urban terrorism of the 1970s, the idea of a decade of peace and love seemed a bitter joke. But it is not because of their faults that the ideas of the '60s have lost some salience. It is because of their success. Rudi Dutschke, the German '60s student leader, coined the phrase...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Revolution in the Air | 10/9/2005 | See Source »

...show had a decent premiere, in a tough slot against Law & Order: Special Victims Unit, an urban take on the innocents-in-jeopardy theme. Bruckheimer's suburban counterprogramming is risky but makes sense. It may be unfair to stereotype the burbs as a refuge for people fleeing life, but one reason people move there is security. Close to Home is not ashamed to milk those anxieties, right down to its title: the danger, it says, is not just in the big cities. It's right here, close to your cozy little cul-de-sac and your good public schools...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: Scaring the Suburbs | 10/9/2005 | See Source »

...College is using Office dA, an architecture and urban design firm in Boston, for the design feasibility study, which is slated to be completed by December, according to Associate Dean of the College Judith H. Kidd...

Author: By Nicole B. Urken, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: The New Harvard Pub: Say What? | 10/7/2005 | See Source »

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