Word: songfulness
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...Ambassadors will continue to pass out the card at T stations and bus stops, and plan to be at the Harvard Square station again on Dec. 7, 11, and 14. Just in time for the upcoming fare hike, the CharlieCard is named after a character in a popular 1950s song who was trapped on the Boston subway because he could not afford to pay the exit fare...
...Hwang says. Hwang, an Economics and Government joint concentrator in Eliot House, has devoted much of his time to Harvard Free Culture, which advocates less restrictive intellectual property policies. “Cultural space used to be public,” Hwang says, adding that even the song “Happy Birthday” is copyrighted. He has also worked on the Dance Conspiracy project—where participants dance together to music broadcast over handheld radios in various Harvard locales—and he hopes to start his own college radio music label. Wong, an Economics concentrator...
...Biology, and Cell Biology.” “We mostly chose the judges because of their popularity among students,” said Chen Li ’09, publicity co-chair for HRCSA. The night kicked off with a HRCSA-produced video that featured the theme song from the popular TV show “Iron Chef,” as well as footage of the teams cooking, which was done in advance. Fuerza Latina’s team with Latin American cuisine was first up in front of the judges. The team served popcorn with their...
Jump to Hollywood's blaxploitation era in the 1960s, when blacks suddenly were allowed to make movies told from our point of view. Melvin Van Peebles' 1971 Sweet Sweetback's Baadasssss Song--an ode to a wronged black man on the run from the cops--introduced the lead character as a "baadasssss nigger coming back to collect some dues!" And that "nigger" in the film, as Van Peebles tells it, snapped the streak of "liberal, sort of nice movies where we always ended up dead...
...breed. The illuminating “Gangbangin’ 101” features The Game. You’d think shit would go down, since The Game is a well-known Blood, and Snoop incessantly references his Crip heritage. But you’d be wrong. The song is a plea for the two gangs to combine into an even more fearsome force. Their peacefulish, emptyish sentiment is neatly summarized by The Game with this lovely couplet: “I’m Martin Luther King with two guns on/ Huey P. Newton with Air Force Ones...