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...wall and pulling her knees against her chest. Set off from the main courtyard is a row of isolation cells. She spent several weeks in one, and hesitates before entering it now. It is relatively big for an isolation cell, 15 ft. by 10 ft., with one small barred window close to the ceiling and no toilet. ("I had to make pee-pee and ca-ca in the same room," she says...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Forever A Prisoner | 5/5/2003 | See Source »

Susannah M. Dickerson ’06 was sitting in her window seat chatting around 5:00 p.m. last night, she said, when a sprinkler in her room started gushing water while the fire alarm began blaring...

Author: By Alexander J. Finerman, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Sprinkler Soaks Stoughton Room | 5/1/2003 | See Source »

Lying flat on the window sill, waiting to be hung, is a blown-up, framed copy of the cartoon that ran on The Crimson editorial page March 19, 2003. The cartoon depicts President Lawrence H. Summers as a puppeteer, manipulating Dean of the Faculty William C. Kirby, who is giving Lewis the boot...

Author: By David B. Rochelson, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Lewis Defended University Athletics | 4/29/2003 | See Source »

...disappointment. The plot, which turns on the efforts of Pokriefke's tortured teenage son Konrad to understand the tragedy, is predictable. With the exception of Pokriefke's mother, a harridan who dotes on her grandson, the characters are not drawn finely enough to grab the reader. But as a window into the compromises and dishonesties with which Germans have had to live for two generations, the book packs a punch...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Germany As Mute Victim | 4/28/2003 | See Source »

...doesn't interest me," Henri Cartier-Bresson says of photography. "It never has. The only thing that has ever been important is drawing." He is sitting at the living-room window of his fifth-floor Paris apartment, looking out over the Tuileries Gardens. It's almost exactly the same plunging view, he points out, that was painted by Monet and Cézanne. Cartier-Bresson abandoned photography in the mid-1970s and now prefers to discuss painting and drawing, his later passions. But even he can't deny the unforgettable images he captured during a half-century of photojournalism. This...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Eternity in an Instant | 4/27/2003 | See Source »

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