 New playwriting director
Erik Ehn is an experimental writer who shuns mainstream theater. A
devout Catholic, he draws his inspiration from Saint
Teresa of Ávila, who, he says, can teach us how to be alive right
here, right now.
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 Should
academics participate in the war on terror? A new
documentary explores the case of social scientist Michael Bhatia ’99,
killed in Afghanistan while using his knowledge to help U.S.
troops.
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 A U.S. Marine in Afghanistan learns the limitations of analysis and debate.
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 That’s the philosophy that led her to fudge. Lucinda Danziger Gregory '50
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 He repairs the misshapen skulls of children. Jeffrey Fearon ’75
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 A tribute to the history of Pembroke.
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 The thrill of a startup is what makes him tick. Dan Ratner ’97
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 She champions the rights of workers. Emily Timm ’03
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 "And you expect me to carry this where?" Carl Armstrong '71 and his
girlfriend, Maddie MacNeil, both of Wayland, Massachusetts, laughed as
they hauled his steamer trunk to his Wriston Quad dorm room.
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Phil Estes believes in his seasoned quarterback and in a crop of
players eager to prove their mettle.
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 Lacrosse midfielder Paris Waterman
'11 became the fourth Brown player in history to make the U.S. national
team and the first in almost two decades.
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 Quarterback Kyle Rowley '01
led the Spokane Shock past the Tampa Bay Storm to take the Arena
Football League championship in ArenaBowl XXIII.
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 Iris Bahr '98 may be America's favorite Russian prostitute.
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 Jeff Zimbalist's The Two Escobars explores the complex ties between World Cup
soccer and cocaine trafficking in 1990s Colombia.
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"No hitting. No biting. No spitting. No fighting. No unsupervised
(what?) standing on your head." Those are a few of the "don'ts" in the
song "Camp Rules" by singer-songwriter Lisa Loeb '90.
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 Kate Burton '79 knows a thing or two about
stardom and private realities. Her father, after all, was Richard
Burton.
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 In
the grave of an ancient Mayan king, an archaeologist discovers
riches that hold clues to a vanished civilization’s way of life.
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 Here’s how the class breaks down.
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 Barrett Hazeltine figures he's taught 30,000 Brown students. Reflections on fifty years of teaching.
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 You're a first-year student. In walks your first teacher: the president.
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 We all cite statistics to back up our arguments. Too bad they’re so often wrong.
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 How secure is cyberspace, really? A professor reports after a year at the state department.
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 The new Perry and Marty Granoff Center for the Creative Arts begins to take shape.
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 Greg Landsberg is hoping to overturn our understanding of the universe by making his own black holes.
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 Kathryn Schulz '96 asks, What's the big deal about being right?
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 When an Alzheimer's sufferer disappears into the snow, no amount of good
intentions will save him.
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What readers are saying at brownalumnimagazine.com
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