Word: daniells
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...Music Director Daniel W. Chetel ’06, conducting his last concert with BachSoc, demonstrated a strong stage presence and was most at ease conducting the chorale movements, featuring superbly blended choir and orchestra...
...first-year students yesterday afternoon. The notice comes less than three weeks before freshmen must declare their concentrations. “This isn’t the first official announcement, but we’re trying to get the word out,” said Professor of Anthropology Daniel E. Lieberman ’86, a member of the Life Sciences Education Committee. Current freshmen will be able to choose among established life science concentrations—Biology, Biochemical Sciences, Chemistry, and Biological Anthropology—as well as five new concentration clusters, Chemical and Physical Biology, Human Evolutionary Biology...
...disintegration of King Richard II’s reign and Henry Bolingbroke’s subsequent bloody accession to the throne, is in many ways rooted in the imagery and customs of the sixteenth century, when it was written. This production seeks to catapult the play into the present. Daniel R. Pecci ’09, who plays Bolingbroke, says that he partially modeled his character on McEnroe whom he claims shares Bolingbroke’s peculiar sense of anger.“It has to be endearing and oddly understandable,” he explains. This choice is indicative...
...event promises to be an important one—not just for Harvard, but for the New England underground music scene as well.“There aren’t enough punk or hardcore shows in Boston,” says John Bogan, whose band Daniel Striped Tiger will perform Friday night. “Whenever there is one, it’s a cool, kind of rare event.”A LOUD TRADITIONThey didn’t used to be so infrequent—at least, not for Harvard students. There have been two prior Record Hospital...
...Cute, Quaint, Hungry and Romantic: The Aesthetics of Consumerism, essayist Daniel Harris wrote about the tendency for "cute" to veer into a fetishization of helplessness or even the grotesque. Writing about a line of dolls from the toy company Galoob, Harris observed that most cute dolls, were they to exist in real life, would not be adorable at all, but in fact deformed and helpless, unable to walk on their stumpy, swollen legs, cursed with useless, fat fingers and with heads too large to be held up by a weak infant's neck. Science has borne out that such helplessness...