Word: nathaniels
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...Nathaniel H. Stein ’10 is an economics concentrator in Adams House. He is Head Writer of the Lampoon...
...Soloist” tries hard to take our emotions for a ride but never quite leaves the ground. Though the performances are convincing and compelling, the movie is weighed down by its insistence on subordinating both music and personal narrative to a broader social message. The story of Nathaniel Ayers (Jamie Foxx) has ample potential to be poignant and transformative. A man whose early talent for the cello propelled him to The Juilliard School and boundless opportunity, somewhere along that journey he lost himself. The movie never gives sufficient evidence as to why or how, but when we first...
...based on the real story of Los Angeles Times columnist Steve Lopez's (Downey) relationship with a homeless schizophrenic named Nathaniel Anthony Ayers (Foxx), whom he met in a downtown LA park in 2005. Ayers was playing a violin during that first encounter, apparently quite well, despite it having only two strings. He had been a Juilliard student in the 1970s, until mental illness cost him just about everything but his love for music. That year, Lopez wrote nearly a dozen columns detailing his attempts to understand and assist Ayers and, in 2008, published a book about their friendship...
...them and replaced that with “e.” For example, Kansas City Chiefs became Kansas City Chefs.RR: Very punny.Nathaniel S. Rakich ’10, Treasurer of Harvard College Crossword Society Roving Reporter (RR): What’s your favorite crossword clue of all time?Nathaniel S. Rakich (NSR): The clue was “enraged and angered.” Answer? “Anagrams.”RR: How did you get involved with the Harvard Crossword Society?NSR: I was the top undergraduate scorer in this tournament two years ago. That?...
...students. For example, editors and researcher-writers, who provide much of the content featured in the guides, stay in frequent contact, despite the fact that editors remain in Cambridge while researchers are away traveling. “It’s a long-distance relationship,” said Nathaniel S. Rakich ’10, managing editor for Let’s Go and a Crimson Editorial editor. “It might seem tough, but many great marriages are often made out of such relationships.”However, Let’s Go is also hoping...