Word: ado
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...facilities that are currently available. Student groups have recently begun utilizing many of the “alternative” spaces on campus—making a storage closet into a painting studio in Winthrop House, putting on a play in the bell tower in Lowell House, performing Much Ado About Nothing on the steps of Memorial Church. These efforts are exciting and promising—as is a recently created inter-House network of arts tutors that hope to coordinate student use of the varied spaces available. Efficiently navigating and reserving space under Harvard’s cumbersome...
...short term, I’m excited by a lot of different projects that have gone up this year. This Arts First weekend is a great chance to see so many shows that are using very, very interesting spaces. Winthrop is having The Tempest go up, and Much Ado is going up in Tercentenary Theater, and people are doing a lot more guerilla theater and working in a lot of interesting spaces. I think the conversion of squash courts in Adams to an ArtSpace is really fantastic, and I hope that more Houses utilize perhaps under-utilized parts of their...
...MUCH ADO ABOUT NOTHING. Hyperion Shakespeare Company presents Much Ado About Nothing, Shakespeare’s charming comedy about the complexities of relationships and the power of words. Promises to be a witty and exuberant open-air production. Thursday, May 1, 2 p.m. Free and open to the public. Memorial Church, Harvard Yard...
...unacquainted, cricket can at first seem to be much ado about nothing. “They spend a lot of time just batting a ball into the ground and standing around,” acknowledges physics grad student and cricket aficionado Lars C. Grant. But, for the 45 cricket addicts who have gathered together in Leverett G to watch a live satellite broadcast of the 2003 Cricket World Cup, batting a ball and standing around is serious business. Among the countries of the former British Empire, there are few sources of national pride greater than securing victory on the cricket...
...customers. In Germany - where the U.S. is the country's second-largest trading partner, with $56 billion in imports - business groups are launching a war of their own, planning "road shows" and taking out full-page ads in the New York Times. But is this all just much ado about nothing? The U.S. government does use its purchasing power as both a carrot and a stick, but formal sanctions just won't happen. And private corporations, like GE, got their "multinational" tag for a reason - they'll sign contracts wherever they get the best deal. As for average U.S. consumers...