Word: anjali
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...remarkably well. In the end the movie works, chiefly because of its success in highlighting the novel’s strengths. So if the Sunday Book Review isn’t your thing, it’s worth giving the cinematic version a try. —Staff writer Anjali Motgi can be reached at amotgi@fas.harvard.edu...
...crossroads in history, it is that diplomacy is a messy affair. The hope is that future attempts at international accord will be less so, though it’s unclear from Andelman’s work how history can aid us in this endeavor.—Staff writer Anjali Motgi can be reached at amotgi@fas.harvard.edu...
...said, “sleep deprivation can make it worse even in the face of treatment.” Last year Harvard freshman participated in a study to observe the sleep cycle, keeping journals about their habits, Barreira added. Students in the Yard yesterday admitted to erratic sleeping cycles. Anjali M. Bhatt ’11 said she had gotten only three hours of sleep the night before. Max A. Newman-Plotnick ’11 boasted yesterday that his “crowning achievement [at Harvard] is a 52-hour period with only 3.5 hours of sleep...
...Staff writer Anjali Motgi can be reached at amotgi@fas.harvard.edu...
...novel. Haven’t I, good boy?” Otilita tritely says at the end. Perhaps she has, but, in her movie-ending change-of-heart, she has also done away with the darker edge that made the novel worth reading. —Staff writer Anjali Motgi can be reached at amotgi@fas.harvard.edu...