Word: colles
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...Happenings are unscripted,” said Neasa Coll ’05, a founding member of Present!, a prominent student arts group. “They’re more interactive. That way, there’s an element of creation and involvement in the process.” Perhaps the nebulous quality of a happening event is its most defining characteristic; “They can be formal or informal, planned or spontaneous,” said Coll...
David D. Mahfouda ’05, a Visual and Environmental Studies Concentrator in Dudley House, and Coll, a Social Anthropology concentrator in Leverett House, are the chief planners of Present!’s next happening. The event’s focus will be the construction of a gigantic cloth...
...need to think about texture and weight,” said Coll, surrounded by brightly colored cloth in a Sew-Low fabric supply shop. “There’s a bright yellow...No, that would look like a fluorescent McDonald’s....” Coll and Mahfouda peruse the rolls of cloth until they find a suitably shocking turquoise to match the cheerful red fabric they have already carefully selected...
...leading the covert operations wanted ironclad, unrestricted language in presidential memos--which are known, rather redundantly, as Memorandums of Notification (MONs)--that killing bin Laden would be legal. (Ever since Iran-contra and other scandals, covert ops have routinely been lawyered in advance.) As Washington Post managing editor Steve Coll points out in his new book, Ghost Wars, Attorney General Janet Reno, among others, wouldn't allow a Bond-style license to kill, so Clinton's MONs would say things like, "apprehend with lethal force as authorized...
...Neasa Coll ’05 started making clothes more out of necessity than recreation. “During a break from high school in Wales,” she recalls, “I went home and made as many things out of wool as possible. It’s really cold and wet there.” In her first year at Harvard, Coll dabbled in costuming for plays; these days, with the help of a roommate’s sewing machine, she uses her fashion powers to “make style for the people...