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...Mornings” is a return to form for the band and features songs that are alternately loud and soft but always introspective and bittersweet. The album is divided into two halves. The first six songs fall under the category of “Saturday Nights” and contain up-tempo beats and driving guitar riffs. The last eight songs, belonging to “Sunday Mornings,” have an acoustic, folk-inspired sound. When considered as a whole, the two halves form a distinctive album that is about partying with abandon in one moment and picking...
...pride of Boston’s beer industry is walking on shards of glass, days after it issued a recall order on as much as a quarter of its bottled beer production. The Boston Beer Company, Inc. issued a recall earlier this week of faulty glass bottles containing their signature brand Samuel Adams beer. “It is roughly 25 percent of our total inventory,” said Seana Phillips of the company’s Investor Relations Office. “Our medical experts think that less than one percent of those bottles actually contain glass...
...Walsh said. “He’s a real key to their lineup. If we can keep him off base and go after Lavarnaway that’s going to be a little easier.”But even if the Crimson pitching staff can contain Yale’s most dangerous weapons, the Harvard bats will have to do their part too, which has not often been the case in this trying season. With the squad six games behind first place Dartmouth in the Rolfe Division and only twelve games left in the Ivy season, there...
...Pavic. “There are many interesting people in this community, but they don’t often have a platform for their voices to be heard,” Duque agreed. “We hope to tap into that.” The weekly newspaper will contain short feature articles on topics ranging from campus dining halls to night life in Boston, according to the co-founders. “We want to focus on local issues,” said Pavic. “That said, this is Harvard, so we may still cover world issues...
...terrace, the late afternoon’s warm summer air, straining to contain its own fragrant richness, had drawn tiny beads of condensation from the Viscountess Felicity Fabreigh’s glass of water. In the silence that had opened up between exchanged insults, she chewed elegantly on her lower lip. Her glass threw off thin beams of iridescence, which played tricks of light and color on Viscount Frederick Fabreigh’s monocle.“It will be pointless to plant it along the north wall,” the Viscount said. “That side...