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...presidential election by the draconian reinterpretation of election bylaws by the council’s Election Commission. It is clear that this past semester’s commission has not served voters or candidates very well. When Commission Chair David I. Monteiro ’04 submits his recap of fall elections in the next few weeks, the council’s new leadership should use these election fiascoes as an opportunity to reevaluate both the rules governing elections and the commission’s operation...

Author: By The CRIMSON Staff, | Title: Alleviating Campaign Fears | 2/6/2003 | See Source »

Audience inquiries included a request for a recap of his recent “Patriotism Is Not Enough” sermon at Memorial Church and his opinion on the Catholic Church’s treatment of homosexual priests...

Author: By Randall T. Adams, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Gomes Explains Path to ‘Good Life’ | 11/7/2002 | See Source »

...more piece of practical advice. Thesis graders, like dogs, can smell fear. Some take their cues from their first impression. Therefore, make absolutely certain that you begin and end well. Be confident, clear and eloquent. If you’re crunched for time, front-load your best stuff and recap it at the end, mentioning what you hope to add to current debates. In a best-case scenario your thesis would be uniformly fine, but if you’re struggling at this stage you should probably settle for a thesis that’s finished and a very good...

Author: By Ben Berger, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: The Doctor Is In | 2/14/2002 | See Source »

...piece explores the case of Susan Smith, the South Carolina mother who drowned her children by letting her car roll into a lake, then lied to police that the kids had been abducted by a black man. Joe Morton, playing the imagined culprit, and Sally Murphy, as Smith, alternately recap news reports on the crime and give voice to Eady's poetic riffs on race and stereotyping. It's sober, well-intentioned evening (with evocative music by Diedre Murray) that, unfortunately, gives short shrift to the most intriguing questions about the crime (like why Smith did it) and fails...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theater: Brutal Imagination | 1/21/2002 | See Source »

...social fabric? Harvard’s large size, so often used to denigrate it, in fact provides a virtually infinite number of niche groups. For instance, there’s a group that goes to the IHOP on Soldier’s Field Road every Sunday night for a recap of the week’s events. Or the casts from Loeb Mainstage productions who derive endless “reunion dinners” from their brief flings with theatrical performance (and one another). Or even at The Crimson, which is now going a bizarre sociological exercise called...

Author: By Couper Samuelson, | Title: Next Stop Wonderland | 11/13/2001 | See Source »

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