Word: naã
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...York Times’ headquarters for the first time as “stepping into the wilderness.” Without a female role model in the field of journalism, Greenhouse says her future was not at all clear. “I think I was very na??ve,” she says. “I just was going to do what I was going to do.”Greenhouse rose rapidly through the ranks. In 1969, the Times promoted Greenhouse to general assignment reporter. In 1970, Greenhouse became the Westchester County correspondent, a post...
...Rosovsky, then dean of the Faculty. “I don’t think it was a big issue [on campus]. Except for the gay rights groups....They really wanted it.”“That may have been more of a blow for others more na??ve than I,” Schatz says.TWENTY-FIVE YEARS LATERA similar bill was eventually passed by the Faculty in 1985, before the Massachusetts General Court did in 1987. The experience of gay undergraduates today is very different.“I feel like Harvard’s definitely...
...delightfully over-the-top. However, during his musical numbers, Minervini dropped the old man act and belted with the clarity and intensity of a Broadway veteran—resulting in a hilariously incongruent performance. Goldstein was equally impressive as Marianne. The role required her to shift between being a na??ve schoolgirl and a jailbaiting temptress, and she did so seamlessly. She even demonstrated formidable hip-hop chops during the musical’s zany rap interludes. Goldstein’s saccharine sweet voice was oddly matched to the Lil’ Kim worthy lyrics she was required...
...still needs to learn.“It’s been three months, and I realize that there are unwritten rules that I’m not aware of,” she says. “I wouldn’t say that I’m na??ve, but it’s very different from working on boards of directors that aren’t elected.”—Staff writer Laura A. Moore can be reached at lamoore@fas.harvard.edu...
...Pegeen, Lloyd-Bollard stands out as another sophomore actor to watch. She lends a certain spunk to the role that makes you understand why Pegeen is different from the other girls of the town, who throw themselves blindly at Christy. At the same time, however, Pegeen’s na??ve concept of romance prevents her from seeing Christy’s lack of substance, and it’s this portrayal that Lloyd-Bollard brings to life particularly vividly.Catherine P. Walleck ’06 presents a complex character well as the Widow Quin, a predatory townswoman...