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...want to find out more about U.S. figure skater Emily A. Hughes '11 or the five Harvard women's hockey alums who are now split between the Canadian and American teams, grab a copy of The Crimson in your dining hall and check out our front and back pages??and while you're at it, why not everything in between...
...former Crimson associate magazine editor. George J.J. Hayward ’11, a Currier House Undergraduate Council representative, solicited e-mail responses immediately after the budget cut announcements from students in the Quad. Within 48 hours he had received over 300 responses—that totalled 75 pages??from Quad residents, he said. Hayward, who says he has surveyed Quad residents in the past, said this issue had the most response of any he had seen. From the responses Hayward said he found several overarching themes. “Theme number one is safety...
...hundred-page Vietnam War epic, “Tree of Smoke.” Last year, he serialized “Nobody Move,” a self-proclaimed “noir novel,” in four parts—each corresponding to about 50 widely spaced pages??in “Playboy” magazine. At passing glance, the novel has all the trappings of a small joke told at the expense of a literary world that rushed to canonize Johnson in the wake of “Tree of Smoke...
...think the majority of high profile celebrities aren’t spending their time everyday updating their profile pages?? or “responding to fans,” he said...
...John Kennedy Toole Caricature: Harvard Salient Guy It might be tough to picture the obese, gassy Reilly playing croquet or palling around with Harvard C. Mansfield ’53, but his hilarious anti-modern screeds are stilted and acrimonious enough to fill the Salient’s pages??and maybe even earn him an op-ed column in The Crimson. Character: Roger Mexico—“Gravity’s Rainbow” by Thomas Pynchon Caricature: Public Piss Guy Roger Mexico begins the novel romantic (“They are in love. Fuck...