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...Paso, Texas. For $3, you get half a dozen tacos; a dollar gets you a comb or a pair of die. It was Terrazas tradition to stand behind the counter at Ben's: Martin and Miguel's father, uncles and cousins worked there, wearing the store uniform, a full-length orange apron. There was another family tradition: the military. Grandfather Jorge is an Army vet. Uncle Luis was a Marine; Uncle Thomas Hance is on his second tour of duty in Iraq. The youngest of the Terrazas brothers, Andres, 14, says he wants to join the Marines. Martin would have...
...Heir. Thurs., April 20-Sat., April 22. 8 p.m. Agassiz Theater. $7; $5, student/seniors. Tickets available at box office. When Allegra M. Richards ’09 and Nathan D. Johnson ’09 came to Harvard, neither of them had experience with full-length musicals. In fact, Richards, the executive producer of this year’s freshman musical, “On the Heir,” had never even been a producer before. “We started to work on this project about the beginning of October,” says Richards...
...powerful way to teach history, says Koonz. "I love bringing media into the classroom, to be able to go to the website for Edward R. Murrow and hear his voice as he walked with the liberators of Buchenwald." Another adjustment to teaching Generation M: professors are assigning fewer full-length books and more excerpts and articles. (Koonz, however, was stunned when a student matter-of-factly informed her, "We don't read whole books anymore," after Koonz had assigned a 350-page volume. "And this is Duke!" she says...
...album, available, depending on your level of connoisseurship, as a CD, a limited edition double 10”, or a triple 7”. Variety’s great, but the elaborate release strategy for “Fab Four,” the group’s fourteenth full-length album, hints at something else: this music can’t quite sell itself. Battling everything from bad reviews to bizarre bicycling accidents, Stereolab’s had it pretty tough the last couple of years. There have been personnel shifts, distracting side projects, and, most damaging, the death...
...slowcore” sound. Doubtful freshmen in need of concrete proof need look no further than the archived records at Harvard’s radio station in the basement of Pennypacker. On the cover of “Today,” the band’s second full-length, someone has scrawled in Bic pen: “Damon, the percussionist on this recording, gave a brilliant and cogent Duchamp presentation in the Jameson seminar last year.” It’s signed by someone named Vodka. Krukowski, for one, takes his duel life?...