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...Science Center. Prior to the e-mail system, yellow paper slips left in the students’ mailboxes notified them of packages. Freshmen welcomed the new procedure, which was similar to that found in upperclassmen houses. “It was so convenient,” said Sylvia R. Chen ’11. About two months ago, hackers wiped out the mail center database and tried to install a new system, according to Nassim Kerkache, supervisor of the mail center. The hackers have not been caught, he said. The mail center has now returned to the old system...
Besides climbing Newton’s notorious Heartbreak Hill, Anne R. Levenson ’09 faced another daunting hurdle as she ran yesterday’s Boston Marathon: a restriction from eating crucial carbohydrates the night before the race, as part of her observance of Passover. Along with her fellow runners in the Harvard College Marathon Challenge (HCMC), Levenson—a self-proclaimed “casual athlete”—not only managed to finish the 26.2-mile course, but also raised money in the process for the Phillips Brooks House Association and Project HEALTH...
...lives have left us wanting more excitement,” the characters sing in the opening scene, expressing a sentiment with which many students trapped between papers and midterms can identify. The musical’s book, co-written by Jacqueline P. Palumbo ’11 and Adam R. Gold ’11, who is also a Crimson editorial writer, was part of a production composed by and put together entirely by freshmen. From its start, the plot is carried by its zany characters, such as capital venturist Dolores B. Sciencecenter (Emily B. Hecht...
...provides a solid performance in the second act. Jakim plays both an energetic little boy and a conservative divorcee well. Rob D. Salas ’08 is almost aggravating in his colonizing patriarchal role yet manages to portray a young girl with wonderful liveliness and characterization. Alex R. Breaux ’09 provides an excellent anchor to the ridiculousness in the first act and continues to hold attention during his monologues about casual gay sex. The ensemble does its best, and while they manage to produce some laughs with their over-the-top antics and well-timed sexual...
...statement “ultimately inaccurate” in an interview with the Yale Daily News. Discussion over the contentious alleged project persisted at Harvard throughout the weekend. “It was weird and disturbing. I was almost cringing as I was reading it,” Ashoke R. Khanwalkar ’09 said. “It seemed like it was senselessly making light of what is a major issue for many people.” The idea of harming one’s body for the sake of performance art is not unheard...