Word: enthusiasm
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...keep on smilin’ for me,” the boombox blares during evening practice at the Malkin Athletic Center. As the dancers break into grins while practicing handstands of sorts, it’s hard to see how the audience this weekend could not catch their contagious enthusiasm. —Staff writer Alison S. Cohn can be reached at acohn@fas.harvard.edu...
...religious groups and the Harvard Secular Society, the Council works to foster interfaith dialogue among the more than 20 faith-based organizations on campus. A COUNCIL IS BORNThe Interfaith Council was officially established in 2004 as a purely discussion-based group, but didn’t initially generate much enthusiasm, according to current council chair Zeba A. Syed ’09.Originally there were three students on the executive board and about 40 members in total. The council has since been revamped and now organizes community service events, and socials, as well as panel discussions. The group?...
...says. “Good theater is impossible to describe, but you always know it when you see it...It’s the one kind of art that is never the same twice.”That said, Kaufman at times has felt a lack of enthusiasm toward theater from the Harvard community. This feeling is sometimes amplified by disappointing turnouts for Mainstage productions.“We have this huge beautiful theater, 556 seats. . . I’ve never seen a full-house student production. We’ve had houses in this theater of 20 people...
...just be a huge supporter.” No matter what the outcome, Ho looks back on her college experience with gratitude to her fellow dancers for the bonds she has formed through dancing. “Another amazing thing about the arts at Harvard is the enthusiasm and passion of the students,” she says. “I’m so lucky to have had the opportunity to work and perform alongside these people, and many of them are my closest friends at Harvard.”—Rachel M. Green
...search for a director. For the second year in a row, the company decided to have their production professionally directed. They knew they found their man in Shelley Bolman. “Shelley’s [application] just immediately stood out because he wrote about the play with such enthusiasm and passion. A great part of that was this new idea he had.” says co-producer Tara L. Moross ’09. Bolman’s “new idea” was to set Shakespeare’s classic tale of mistaken identity...