Word: loops
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Until now. Later this month Hofstadter will publish I Am a Strange Loop (Basic Books; 412 pages), in which he expands and builds on the groundwork he laid in his earlier work. But Hofstadter has been through a lot in the past 28 years, including the tragic death of his wife, and I Am a Strange Loop goes to far darker and more personal places than the playful book I read as a teenager...
...current proposal is to have one shuttle make a long loop through Allston and Cambridge and dedicate another undergraduate shuttle to follow a shorter and more direct route from the Allston Houses to Harvard Square during peak morning hours. While this is a good start, it is not enough in itself. In order for the campuses to feel connected, students will need shuttles making frequent, convenient stops all day long. Because the Larz-Andersen Bridge is vehicle accessible and the Weeks Footbridge is not, such a shuttle system will be more feasible if the new Houses are located where...
...major penalty and game misconduct for hitting from behind. A Crimson minor cancelled out the first 120 seconds, but then captain Dylan Reese cashed in during the home team’s three minutes of man-advantage time. He took the puck at the blue line, then skated a loop around the back of the net and through the left circle before beating Cornell goaltender Ben Scrivens through traffic at 15:42. But less than five minutes into the third frame, a pair of Harvard penalties—including freshman Chad Morin’s five-minute major and game...
...physical world and the human form. The exhibit seems to have given Lynch a creative jolt as well (not that he needed one): "When I saw all this stuff again, I got inspired for some new things by the old." In addition, several short films will run on a loop, and there will be an interactive soundscape filling the exhibition space that combines Lynch's own engineered audio textures with sounds that patrons can add to the mix, resulting in a one-of-a-kind soundtrack...
Meet Nathanael G. Mason. His clipped British accent may throw you for a loop. No, he’s not a redcoat who eschewed the Oxbridge system for a Harvard education. He’s actually French—from Annecy, a small town in the Alps near Geneva. And he’s one of the two students from L’Institut d’Études Politiques de Paris (dubbed Sciences Po) on campus this semester. But Mason isn’t your average visiting student. He’s an exchange student. And the difference...