Word: misse
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...with energetic, well-crafted originals and enough improvisation to sate the average hippie.Taking the Holyoke Center stage this Sunday at 3 p.m. , Major Major— with its dueling guitars, Latin-tinged jams, and nuanced songwriting—is sure to please almost any audience: don’t miss them. So Long PrincessAnd then there’s So Long Princess, Harvard’s ever popular (and perhaps the world’s only) “Star Wars” tribute band. Lead singer—and facebook.com legend—Nathan J. Dern...
...sprawl beginning at 1 p.m. and featuring over a hundred events in and around Harvard Yard—is heavy on classical performances. There are 37 listed classical music performances and dozens of venues; those in attendance will have five or six options every half-hour. For those who miss certain performances, some will be repeated on Sunday, May 7. It is also possible for audiences to spend the whole afternoon watching early music performances in Adolphus Busch Hall, chamber music by students from “Music 180r: Performance and Analysis” and “Music...
After three years durring which the Undergraduate Council’s (UC) attempts at social programming have been decidedly hit-or-miss, a College-wide social event organized by the Dean’s Office has largely succeeded for the second time in as many tries (the Harvard State Fair being the first). With the elections for the newly-created College Events Board scheduled to begin any day now, the challenge for future social planners will be making sure this pattern continues...
Yesterday marked the spring’s final edition of Government 97b, the second half of the government department’s sophomore tutorial. Few were paying attention during the unceremonious finale, and even fewer will miss the course that has left captive students begging for mercy—or a bit if intellectual stimulation—all semester long. Attendance often dropped to laughable levels as some TFs resigned themselves to making wink-wink agreements, telling their students that they did not need to attend the lectures, while others encouraged “multitasking.” With this...
...Even those who did not advocate boycotting school or work were still able to participate in the day's events. In Los Angeles and New York City, rallies were scheduled for 4 p.m., so school-age kids wouldn't miss classes. Still others planned to attend church services or to join the protests during their lunch breaks. Rather than simply walk off the job, some workers requested paid time off or shifted their regular work schedule to later in the day. Orlando Garcia, a native of Honduras who now owns a trucking business in Miami, took...