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...rainy morning a few weeks ago, my biggest concern was trying to finish my reading for section. I have no way of knowing what 62-year-old Philip Macleod’s greatest sources of suffering and anxiety were: the frigid rain outside, unwashed clothes that smelled like stale beer, homelessness, loneliness, or depression. But Mr. Macleod walked into William James Hall that morning to get out of the cold, and maybe find some company. He broke the busy silence of the library with his boisterous attempts to engage students, including myself, in conversation. When Harvard University Police Department (HUPD...

Author: By Rachel M Singh | Title: Outside the Comfortable | 4/14/2008 | See Source »

...bobbing heads of the clarinets and the poise of the cellists, immediately immersing the audience into the comic opera. The rare sincere moments in acting were the most spectacular. The dragoons offered a relieving element of honesty, admitting outright that they hated the effusive Romanticism and that their ultimate concern was the pursuit of their ex-fiancés. Led by a confident Colonel Calverley (Eliot Shimer ’11), the group’s robust stature and well-timed side-commentary provided a necessary comedic counterpoint to Bunthorne’s effeminacy. Patience?...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Parody Requires ‘Patience’ | 4/14/2008 | See Source »

...have some dearth of events on campus,” McLoughlin said. McLoughlin said over the last three semesters, there were only five weekends in which there were more than two large events, and that often the weekends before and after had no events. In response to the concern that capping on-campus events might prompt students to decamp for less-safe environments like final clubs, McLoughlin said that he would consider increasing the cap to three per night if at least one event were restricted to Harvard students. Another major change will require that large events be registered three...

Author: By Chelsea L. Shover, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Dean Pushes for More Big Events | 4/13/2008 | See Source »

...faculty members are being left out of major decisions that shape the University, why would they show up to FAS meetings? Most students are so resigned to the fact of their irrelevance in deciding all the things that concern their happiness at school—the control of social space, party and liquor rules, educational policies—that they have given up. The College is not the same as it was in 1636, so if it is to remain the special educational community that it dreams itself to be, students and faculty members must work together to stop...

Author: By Andrew D. Fine | Title: School’s Out For Summer | 4/13/2008 | See Source »

...well as for the dancers. It’s been a very good experience.” But Bergmann adds, “It’s also hairy.” Live music is less reliable than recorded. It brings with it more risk of variation, an added concern that, Bergmann says, puts the dancers “on their toes.”Mark Olson, director and conductor of The Harvard Wind Ensemble, saw similar difficulties and benefits in the collaboration, which was first proposed by Bergmann. “[The dancers] are following...

Author: By Sasha F. Klein, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Winds Keep Dancer on Their Toes | 4/11/2008 | See Source »

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