Word: spaced
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...sold out concerts at the Neil Simon Theater in New York City. Although Merchant's studio creations are enjoyable, the atmosphere created by a small audience is perfect for her stellar vocals. You cannot help but listen to every sonorous, sexy note. Her rendition of David Bowie's "Space Oddity" is unforgettable. Merchant seduces us with her sultry vocals on "Carnival," romances our tender hearts on "Wonder" and lulls us into a somber trance on "Ophelia." Few musicians can make a small live atmosphere as truly intimate as Natalie Merchant does, and Live in Concert genuinely captures this glowing feel...
...skinny on Bardo Pond, you might want to look up some of their terminology. Among the band's releases are albums entitled Bufo Alvarus and Aminata, words for hallucinogenic frogs and magic mushrooms, respectively. Their individual songs tend to focus on subjects such as Tibet, Buddha and outer space...
...group of quad students with the vision of having access to a recording studio for both themselves and the Harvard community. They obtained the funds and equipment they needed through donations from Pforzheimer House and alum and audiophile Bob Doyle. They then wired the studio themselves in a space formerly occupied by the Radcliffe radio station. Though it was fully functional from the start, the studio has grown over the past ten years into a completely equipped digital facility capable of turning out professional recordings...
...have enough for student groups? That's an abomination. This is lunch money to the University. If Harvard is not serving its students well in academics as well as in extracurriculars, it is not doing its job. Our under-funded student groups should get more money and more space. They are the life of this University. But, Undergraduate Council, don't take your money from me when Harvard just lent $20 million to someone else...
...earth's atmosphere today is significantly different than it was in 1966 - it's filled with man-made devices that could be damaged by going bump in the night with a rock flying at 250 miles per hour. Accordingly, a planned space shuttle mission will be delayed until the 19th. But people on the ground would do well to turn their gazes to the storm - due to irregularities in the earth's rotation, another one isn't expected until the 22nd century...