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...teacher gives me a nasty look, and she doesn’t look too good to start with. I don’t want to go to school.”). “When Rüya is Sad” offered a novelist-father??s more self-reflective perspective. “Does she have a stomachache? Or maybe she is discovering the taste of her melancholy. Let her be, let her be sad, let her lose herself in solitude and her own smell. The first aim of an intelligent person is to achieve unhappiness when...

Author: By Alison S. Cohn, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Nobel Winner Pamuk Recounts Thirty Years of Writing | 10/19/2007 | See Source »

...wasn’t baseball—or softball—that Kylie came to know and love. The junior is currently the starting goalie for the Crimson field hockey team. And despite her father??s influence at UMass, she has another family member who may have had the bigger influence on her college decision...

Author: By Paul T. Hedrick, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Harvard Sports Enhanced By Two Stones | 10/16/2007 | See Source »

While Kylie didn’t choose her father??s sports path, she certainly had competitive lacrosse in her blood. Katey, who is Mike’s sister, was a lacrosse star in college at New Hampshire. She was a four-year letterwinner and captain of both the hockey and lacrosse teams, helping both teams to championships during her time there...

Author: By Paul T. Hedrick, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Harvard Sports Enhanced By Two Stones | 10/16/2007 | See Source »

...pursued car feels suffocating because of Gray’s decision to use only sounds that the character are hearing and no soundtrack. But his treatment of the political nature of his story fails to impress. When the mob attacks Joseph at his home, Bobby goes behind his father??s back and spontaneously volunteers for an undercover assignment, eventually becoming a cop himself. Bobby’s rise to arms implies that the ordinary citizen must take up arms against a common foe, but Gray never takes the trouble to grapple with what this means for innocent bystanders...

Author: By Kyle L. K. Mcauley, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: We Own The Night | 10/12/2007 | See Source »

...alongside Jason Schwartzman and Roman Coppola, son of Francis Ford, is an oddly intense portrait of brotherhood and loss. It chronicles three siblings—played by Owen Wilson, Adrien Brody, and Schwartzman—who embark on a Beatles-esque spiritual journey through India a year after their father??s death, having spent the intervening time estranged. Everything does not go as planned: after several strange mishaps, the brothers end up lost in the desert with no one to ask for help and no easy way out. Wilson, Brody, and Schwartzman create a compellingly realistic dynamic...

Author: By Andrew F. Nunnelly, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: The Darjeeling Limited | 10/5/2007 | See Source »

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