Word: helens
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...adaptation of controversial playwright Jean Genet’s most famous play, will be presented by the Harvard-Radcliffe Dramatic Club from Friday, Oct. 25 to Saturday, Nov. 2 at the Loeb Drama Center on the Mainstage. Directed by Andrew Boch ’03 and produced by Helen Estabrook ’03, Catharina Lavers ’03 and Jeremy Reff ’04, this exciting production of The Balcony brings back to the Loeb Mainstage Genet’s tale of sexual and scatological revolutionaries for the first time since 1985. Written when director Genet...
...believe in Miracles?” asks director Katherine Sorensen. This weekend’s production of The Miracle Worker by William Gibson answers this question. Based on the life of Helen Keller, Class of 1904, and her teacher Annie Sullivan, Sorensen hopes that the play will be well recieved and “will raise consciousness about the blind.” After searching for years for a way to help their daughter who, due to illness, became blind and deaf as an infant, Helen’s parents hire a young governess, Annie. Several fierce battles follow: between...
...family coverage; one small technology firm recently offered a cash bonus to employees for switching to their spouse's plan. Xerox once tried adjusting its health-care allowance so single workers would get more and those with families a bit less. "After three years, we killed it," says Helen Darling, a former benefits manager for Xerox and now president of the Washington Business Group on Health. "All the people who were in the family category screamed miserably: 'I wouldn't have had all these children if I knew you were going to cut our family allowance...
...this year, he is the center of at least two courses taught by English faculty: “Beowolf and Seamus Heaney,“ offered by Daniel Donoghue through the Extension School, and “The Poetry of Seamus Heaney,” a junior seminar with Helen Vendler, author of two books about...
...served as a remarkable library and meeting place for three-quarters of a century. It became, over the years, stomping grounds for the likes of T.S. Eliot ’10, e.e. cummings ’15 and Allen Ginsburg, as well as generations of Advocate editors and Helen Vendler students...