Word: bennette
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...North House," the original name of PfoHo, inspired the denomination. Originally composed of Al Bennett '00 and Wellesley senior Becky Warren, the two have since expanded, picking up guitarist Altay M. Guvench '03 and the man on the keys, Jose L. Sandoval...
...Bennett and Warren met through each other's roommates while they were dating a couple of years ago. The two blended their southern backgrounds and musical passion and, with the help of some local rhythmical talents, this self-proclaimed "Do It Yourself" band produced their first album, entitled "Two Stories." For their CD release celebration, North House held a couple gigs--one at Wellesley and one at Harvard. Attempting to spice up the already wild aura of Hanover, New Hampshire, the two also played local taverns at Dartmouth one summer...
...Given that three of the group members will graduate in June, the band has some serious choices to make. Warren, Sandoval and Bennett all expressed a sincere desire to keep the band going in the Boston area. Warren says, "I hope to get a part time job in the area and continue playing." Similarly, Bennett plans on sticking around and jumping into the music industry by making it big, or more realistically, involving himself in the recording and sound production sides of music. While they're still around, catch 'em at The White Horse Tavern in Allston on April...
...some hits cry out for sequels, whereas other books are fine just as they are. We may occasionally wonder what happens after Elizabeth Bennett marries Mr. Darcy (after all, he's kind of difficult), but Jane Austen's subsequent novels are variations on a theme, not repetitions of one. With her modern-day version of Pride and Prejudice, on the other hand, Fielding got caught in the vise of a lucrative contract and a punishing deadline, and the new book has an air of desperation. With the same diary format, complete with alcohol and cigarette logs, and the same wacky...
...there's a canon of facts that all schoolchildren should know. In lieu of precise lesson plans, teachers are told that third-graders, for example, should study the Punic Wars and sixth-graders selections from Shakespeare. "There's been a real diffuseness in curricula," says former Education Secretary William Bennett, whose new book The Educated Child lays out a grade-school curriculum based on Core Knowledge. "Kids are reading Batman rather than Henry James, and that's got to change...