Word: campusã
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...internship reading scripts at a production company in Los Angeles last summer. “A lot of them were so bad that I thought, ‘Why not try?’” he says.Frank is one of the two kinds of screenwriter on campus??the kind who truly wants his work to bring him commercial success. For lack of a better term, we can call them “the pre-professionals.”He is currently completing two scripts to submit to Hollywood producers, an ambitious goal. Most Harvard screenwriters consider...
...wine with a suppressed mirth so powerful that scientists have yet to fully understand its magnitude. Online discussion forums about “The Royal Tenenbaums” are full of these people.However dryly hilarious these individuals may be, we must not conflate them with the true ironists on campus??members of final clubs.Many people consider members of final clubs to be fully honest in their matching ties and manly cavorting. This is not the case in the least. In fact, the males of final clubs are such adept practitioners of irony that even people who pride themselves...
...last and most recognizable works—will feature prominently in the performance. Mozart’s upcoming anniversary has made him seem a bit like Willy Loman: apparently, homage must be paid. But while countless orchestras across the nation—and across campus??have been obligatorily trotting out his works, BachSoc will further embellish its celebration of Mozart’s legacy by performing a piece by Heitor Villa-Lobos. The Brazilian composer’s Sinfonietta No. 1, written in 1916, was created to honor the memory of Mozart. Rounding out the program will...
University President Lawrence H. Summers may be on his way out, and for Harvard College students, his departure has hardly gone unnoticed.In recent weeks, as rumors buzzed of Summers’ impending resignation, students perked up their ears. As the storm clouds gathered, many of campus?? more politically vocal students were already airing their opinions, but when Summers officially announced his resignation, there was sharp increase in the volume of discussion among the College’s typically quiet student body. Owing to the obvious gravity of the issue, and perhaps Summers’ celebrity affectation among undergraduates...
...something completely different: this Friday, Harvard’s own Din & Tonics and Opportunes—two of the more popular a cappella groups on campus??will fill Sanders Theatre with vocal iterations of rock, jazz, and pop standards from the past century...