Word: leveret
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...healthy membership lists. And our loyalties to our Houses run as deep. With the willful blindness of zealotry, Quadlings defend their Garden Street gulag; House Committees do brisk trade in crest-emblazoned beer steins and shot glasses; in the spring, upperclassmen, one of whom will be dressed as a leveret, will gather outside Annenberg and—shouting, waving posters and distributing t-shirts—welcome first-years into the Houses they’ve just been assigned. And I don’t find any of that particularly objectionable...
...with musicians, artists should be working with dancers. In my experience at Harvard, one of the best aspects of it for me was that I worked not just as an actor, which is what I've ended up, but a director, a designer, I directed a dance prove in Leveret House. I directed two operas [The Marriage of Finger in Leveret House and The Begger's Opens in Address Houses]. I worked with dancers from the Boston Conservatory and designers from the design school, and architecture students, because I had many other interests besides acting. When I came to Harvard...
...relationship between the lovers. Dede and Nicole, provides a marvelous contract to the rest of Belleville. At one point we see Dede sneaking up to Nicole who is gobbling down some cake at a patisserie. "I am cooking leveret stuffed with pistachios, parsley, and a hint of garlic for dinner. "Two leverets," he protests. Baye and Leotard manage to make an incongruous relationship seem convincing and touching. The very thing that makes the couple so vulnerable to both the gangsters and the police alike, their mutual loyalty is at the some time, the only positive thing in the story...
South quickly reganied momentum when Auteri, just second after the second-half kickoff, took advantage of Leveret's double coverge on Chaney and hit tight end Bob Carey in the end zoen for a 50-yard score...
...most befuddling, and interesting, article in this issue belongs to Archie Epps, assistant dean of the College and a tutor in Leveret House. He is a complex person, at once an Establishment Negro and a vigorously anti-Establishment rebel. The jolly conductor of the Leverett House Glee Club is simply not the same man who writes bitterly about the death of Malcolm X; nor are wither of these the scholar who wishes to "treat Negro history as a problem of social science...