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...Phish concert. She can come if she wants, so long as she doesn’t expect me to pay any attention to her or protect her from the tour rats Best way for a girl to get your attention: Cover herself in glow-in-the-dark paint and turn off the lights... ohhhh yeahhhh... Where to find you on a Saturday night: Sipping scotch with the lads down at the snooker lodge as we regale each other in ye olden times gone past of yesteryear First thing you notice about a girl: How holy their soul is Your best...

Author: By FM Staff, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Scoped! | 12/7/2005 | See Source »

...sullen, depressed alcoholic—Krause provides the “why.” Zorah is in love with Dick, who went off to sea; when he returns, he falls in love with Rose. Biegler then incorporates this background story into a more nuanced performance.“PAINTED EMBLEMS”Just as the actors onstage hone their art, a different, but no less integral, craft is practiced in the basement’s set-building workshop and in the pit, the homes of the technical crew and the orchestra, respectively. The lighting, sound, set, and music...

Author: By April B. Wang, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: A Night at the Operetta | 12/2/2005 | See Source »

It’s got a sleek new paint job, chrome trim, and a flaming grille. But rather than powering up a car, this sweet machine revs up Harvard’s students. This fall, the Eliot Grille, a student-run snack bar in Eliot House, is getting a neat new facelift. Proposed changes would transform its previous, drab decor into something that resembles a ’50s diner. Nondescript walls will now be washed in bright red and blue. And the House is buying ’50s-style furniture to complement the new paint job. This furniture...

Author: By Kyle A. Magida, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Eliot Grille Gets Makeover | 12/1/2005 | See Source »

Postmodernism comes to kid lit! But to children it will seem more like good subversive fun. The conceit is that the book's illustrator, Ned--who is often depicted hard at work--can't paint fast enough to stay ahead of the reader. So a cartoon stand-in for Lendler keeps turning up to urge the reader to slow down for Ned's sake and to please, please not turn the page yet. Now, what youngster can resist defying such a request? The narrative, a standard knight-rescuing-an-imprisoned-princess tale, unravels ridiculously as the overwhelmed Ned is forced...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Best Children's Books of 2005 | 11/30/2005 | See Source »

Paul Barreira, director of behavioral health and academic counseling at UHS, agrees that time off can be beneficial, but he wonders whether it is universally good for every student. Perhaps some, when talking to administrators, or petitioning the Ad Board for readmission, feel pressure to paint their experience in a rosy light. “Do students even tell us the honest truth when they come back?” he asks. “I mean, I don’t even know, do they just tell us what we want to hear...

Author: By A. HAVEN Thompson, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: From Harvard to Home and Back Again | 11/30/2005 | See Source »

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