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After flocking to high-paying firms during the greatest economic expansion in U.S. history, many recent graduates now find themselves jobless. For some, the economic downturn may be a blessing in disguise.
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For 100 years Sock and Buskin has been turning out actors bound for Broadway, The Big Chill - and Wall Street.
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Trapped in Ramallah, a teacher finds himself unable to return to his students.
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Commencement Number 234, and Counting.
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With subjects - and readers - like them, how can a magazine go wrong?
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To a woman raised in a country at war, September 11 seems all too familiar.
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Navigating the crosscurrents of tension and understanding.
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Baseball loses the division by one pitch.
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Experts weigh in on reforming the Brown police
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NPR's Sylvia Poggioli tries to bridge the Atlantic
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Young entrepreneurs at work
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The NCAA champion women's rowing team does it again.
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Poverty as a problem of human rights
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Consultants look at racial profiling and come up empty
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More than 700 people died during Chicago's 1995 heat wave. Could their deaths have been prevented?
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To really comprehend the Jon Spencer Blues Explosion, you really ought to be there.
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Finding the hidden people of the Amazon.
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Clueing in the cognoscenti.
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Two young editors have shown that even a 500-year-old university press can produce best-sellers.
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How science fiction helped topple the Soviet regime.
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Ben Marcus '91 M.F.A. on the power of words.
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Evelyn Hu-Dehart: Director, Center for the Study of Race and Ethnicity in America
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Farewell: Brian W. Dickinson '73 A.M.
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Farewell: Rose Ring Carroll '54 Ph.D.
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More than 500 classmates and their guests celebrated a wonderful
twenty-fifth reunion over four glorious days filled with banter,
barbecues, and a brunch with Providence mayor "Buddy" Cianci.
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"We had an absolute ball." "We wouldn't change a thing for the
thirty-fifth." Those are just two of the many comments we heard from
the 108 classmates and sixty-six spouses and guests who flocked to
campus for our thirtieth reunion.
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About eighty-five classmates and fifty-four guests attended our thirty-fifth reunion.
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About 100 classmates and guests congregated for our fortieth reunion.
Those who stayed to march basked in the sunshine and the sounds of
bagpipes, " Ever True," and cheers of "'62! '62!" proclaimed by the
newest alumni of Brown.
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How to describe our forty-fifth reunion and President Ruth Simmons's
first? Just wonderful! With many people back, some for the first time
since graduation, we ate, danced, schmoozed, marched, and left with
renewed spirit for Brown.
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Reunion weekend brought 312 of us to brown - 199 members of the class
of '52, plus guests and spouses. Some, returning for their first
reunion since graduation, couldn't believe the myriad changes.
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We kicked off our 55th reunion with the brown bear buffet and campus Dance on Friday night.
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With great spring weather and wonderful events, we celebrated an
outstanding sixtieth reunion. The weekend began with cocktails at class
headquarters and a short bus ride for dinner at the Squantum Club on
the Providence River, which was attended by eighty-three classmates and
guests.
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After many months of talk, our sixty-fifth reunion has come and gone. We're already looking forward to the next official one.
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When all paths led to a dear old well.
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New titles from Brown authors.
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