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...where fans can enjoy all of the division series action. CAMBRIDGE 1 (27 Church St.) If you’re craving great flatbread pizza and a lowkey place to watch baseball at the same time, check out Cambridge 1. While the wait for tables can be long, the two flat screen TVs and the sports focus makes Cambridge 1 worthwhile. Open Daily: 11 a.m.—1 a.m. JOHN HARVARD’S BREW HOUSE (33 Dunster St.) John Harvard’s is all about the atmosphere, with a bustling scene and music that reminds...

Author: By Allegra M Richards, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Activity Activity | 10/12/2005 | See Source »

...sensitively balanced the voicing, emphasizing essential harmonic changes in “Feux Follets” and “Harmonie du Soir” also by Liszt. Yuan also treated audiences to an impromptu performance of Franz Schubert’s “Impromptu in G-flat, opus 90,” which offered a soothing respite from the program’s intensity. No piano recital would be complete without Frederick Chopin. Fittingly, Saturday’s concert featured Chopin’s famous Polonaise in A, opus 40, nicknamed the “Military...

Author: By Madeleine J. Baverstam and Jennifer D. Chang, CRIMSON STAFF WRITERSS | Title: Harvard Piano Society Season Opens Strongly | 10/11/2005 | See Source »

...cent)-per-gal. gasoline tax that even some conservatives are supporting. In fact, it's far more likely that the next Grand New Policy Proposal will be another tax cut gussied up as tax "reform," perhaps even the abolition of the progressive income tax, replaced by a sales or flat tax. But that sort of thing would probably meet the same fate as Social Security reform. Congress has turned balky. The public may be skeptical of huge tax blowouts so long as more pressing problems-like Iraq, the federal deficit, the economic iffiness caused by high gasoline prices-- are untended...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: How Bush Should Renovate the West Wing | 10/9/2005 | See Source »

...Smith, despite her year’s stay with the school, doesn’t try to be a journalist. She invents annual dinners where professors and freshmen listen to a glee club while Haitians serve chicken for a $22 flat wage. There is the Bus Stop, a restaurant that serves the same as Cafe Algiers but is embellished with basement-shaking poetry performances...

Author: By April H.N. Yee, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Beautiful Zadie’s Novel Disappointingly Dense | 10/7/2005 | See Source »

...usual, Monk’s signature dissonant chords, rapid-fire runs down the piano and flat-hand technique are all there. But this time around, he is not simply going through the motions. Every note is important, and he forces the audience to listen to every move he makes. The notes themselves are often secondary to the silences, the stutters, the phrases, and everything else that connects one pitch to another...

Author: By J. samuel Abbott, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Review Of The Week: Thelonious Monk/John Coltrane | 10/7/2005 | See Source »

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