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...former Crimson staff writer.While speaking in a foreign language can be difficult, it can also be advantageous. “Not being a native speaker can let you get into character easier because the language itself is not yours,” said actor Gabriela B. Tantillo ’09, who plays the Madre.“I think that if a group of students dare to put on a play in Spanish then maybe other groups of students will follow,” said Rodriguez Ballesteros. “It can encourage students...
...said. It might be in a slightly different form or managed in a slightly different way, but I don’t think this has to be a crisis either on the side of the deans or of the students.” —Staff writer Victoria B. Kabak can be reached at vkabak@fas.harvard.edu...
...HSA’s assistant managers, said Creamer’s vision for HSA is the biggest thing he brings to the presidency. “I think that we’ve spurred entrepreneurship in a lot of the agencies,” said current president, William B. Hauser ’08. Over the past year, the organization devoted significant resources to ensuring the survival of Let’s Go, whose long-time publisher announced in September that it will not continue its partnership with HSA after their contract expires in 2009. HSA came under fire from...
...sophomores who, for the first time, would enter Houses without having chosen a field of study. Under the old system, undergradutes picked a major by the end of freshman year. So far, the system has received mixed reviews from students. After her freshman year, Winthrop House resident Eva B. Rosenberg ’10 knew she would concentrate in a humanities discipline but wasn’t sure which one. When she was assigned a premed tutor as her sophomore adviser, she contacted her sophomore advising coordinator, who told her that the House was short on tutors in her field...
...sophomores who, for the first time, would enter Houses without having chosen a field of study. Under the old system, undergradutes picked a major by the end of freshman year. So far, the system has received mixed reviews from students. After her freshman year, Winthrop House resident Eva B. Rosenberg ’10 knew she would concentrate in a humanities discipline but wasn’t sure which one. When she was assigned a premed tutor as her sophomore adviser, she contacted her sophomore advising coordinator, who told her that the House was short on tutors in her field...