Word: studioã
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...much for Harvard students to do,” says Rick Jenkins, who runs the Studio, which recently celebrated its tenth anniversary.Producers from “Late Night with Conan O’Brien” have scouted a number of young comics at the Studio??which unlike the bar at the Kong, welcomes minors—some of whom went on to perform on the show.Jenkins is especially interested in unearthing new talent. “We’re very friendly to college students and new comics,” he says. Still, Jenkins won?...
...maze of slender cords dangles out of a hanging metal rib cage and pelvic structure. “I’m exploring how we experience the world and how the nervous system plays a role in allowing those experiences to happen,” she says. Surveying the studio??s lively disarray of half-finished projects and discarded body parts, Professor Hsu stresses the process-oriented nature of the class. The students of VES 130r agree that the intensity of their investigations is their driving force. As Siller concludes, “It is very rewarding...
...plan right now to get new equipment up to the QRAC for many different sports,” he said. “Everything will be replenished.” The renovated QRAC reopened last month with a new state-of-the-art 4,100-square-foot dance studio??but with one fewer basketball court and a reconfigured cardiovascular exercise area. The dance studio was opened to replace the Rieman Center for Dance, which was reclaimed by the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study earlier this year. Elizabeth Randall, capitol projects manager at the Office of Physical Resources, said...
Already, the Carpenter Center’s fourth floor studio is full of transplants. Delicate flowering branches are arranged on tables. Rohny Escareño ’04-’06 uses pushpins to affix mushrooms to the studio??s hematite walls. (Stopforth jokes, “He hopes they will grow there.”) On another table sit the products of the class’ first project: balls of clay into which the class members molded blades of grass, berries, and pinecones from the site...
...would-be blockbuster, “Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit.” You need someone to do the interview circuit, but the movie’s most recognizable players are made of plasticine clay. What’s a marketing team to do? The studio??s solution is to send out the film’s co-director/co-screenwriter, Nick Park, the creator of the Wallace and Gromit characters. There’s just one problem: Park is just not cut out for interviews. At one point in speaking to The Harvard Crimson...