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ARTS
By Graeme Wood
Friday, November 30, 2001
When President Theodore Roosevelt, Class of 1880, returned to Mother Harvard to accept an honorary doctorate in 1902, he bellowed
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ARTS
By Graeme Wood
Friday, November 30, 2001
When President Theodore Roosevelt, Class of 1880, returned to Mother Harvard to accept an honorary doctorate in 1902, he bellowed
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ARTS
By Graeme Wood
Friday, November 9, 2001
In Paul Theroux’s memoir of his friendship with V.S. Naipaul, Naipaul hisses a typically vain slur at the Nobel Prize
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ARTS
By Graeme Wood
Friday, November 2, 2001
By GRAEME C.A. WOOD CRIMSON STAFF WRITER It would be too easy to write off Canada as just another country
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ARTS
By Graeme Wood
Friday, October 5, 2001
Is Susan Sontag the only critic left who still cares about high culture? It’s been almost 40 years since “Against
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ARTS
By Graeme Wood
Friday, December 8, 2000
"Politics," said Frank Zappa, "is the entertainment branch of industry.'' Much as I prefer to avoid quoting the artist behind
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ARTS
By Graeme Wood
Friday, May 19, 2000
The war photographer Robert Capa distilled the secret of his craft into one sentence: "If your pictures aren't good enough,
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ARTS
By Graeme Wood
Friday, March 3, 2000
It is, as Dan Quayle famously reminded us, a terrible thing to lose one's mind. But in Margot Livesey's disappointing
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ARTS
By Graeme Wood
Friday, February 25, 2000
Smoke Bluntly Gets in Your Face By GRAEME WOOD CONTRIBUTING WRITER There is a strong case to made, based on
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ARTS
By Graeme Wood
Friday, January 14, 2000
Rembrandt left behind more self-portraits than any artist before or since. With his new book Rembrandt's Eyes, historian Simon Schama
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