Word: trademark
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...gypsy-bluegrass fusion to rhythmic ping pong. These offbeat acts cover a considerable range of traditions and experiences. Some, like Jeolla Woodo Iri Pangut, a Korean percussion group, deliver faithful renditions of ancient pieces; others, like The Harvard Undergraduate Drummers (THUD), draw on modern-day implements to produce their trademark sound. All of these groups, however, find a common goal in their efforts to bring their unusual music to a University-wide audience. I JUST WANT TO BANG ON THE DRUM Danielle R. Lehle ’07, a member of Music for Percussion, is no stranger to the stage...
...style, rarely fails to spark interest.A SERIOUS SATIRISTDurang was raised in a Catholic home in New Jersey and attended Catholic school before arriving at Harvard in 1967. He wrote his first play at age eight and a few more in high school, but it was in college that his trademark style first emerged.Starting with a “silly little play” he wrote during his senior year here—humbly titled “The Greatest Musical Ever Sung”—Durang has rattled the religious and artistic communities. To this day, he claims...
...upper-class rightists than he did hardened reactionies. Long unwilling to taint himself with the snarling language and mean-spirited policies favored by the National Front, de Villiers has often been belittled as "Le Pen Lite." He's clearly looking to change that - and not just with his trademark warning of a nefarious "Islamization of France." With Le Pen uncharacteristically quiet and politically dormant since reaching the run-off in the 2002 presidential race, de Villiers' has been busy trying to win National Front voters over with depiction of Le Pen as an old, spent force - and himself...
...keeping with the tradition of unwholesomeness, Alexandra M. Helprin ’07, one of the play’s producers, explains that the Classical Club’s staging of “The Birds” will restore some of the Greek master’s trademark raunch: “Earlier translations of the play were censored. All of the dirty words were cut out and entire passages were missing. We’ve revived all of that...
...news, Apr. 17. I was surprised that the article written about the renovations planned for Currier House was titled “Party’s Over.” The party is not over. The article gives the impression that Currier House is losing its trademark party space and that there is a heavy amount of disapproval within the House for the changes. After soliciting input from Currier residents, however, the Currier House Committee found that the renovations are overwhelmingly supported. While the article does manage to fit in all of the renovations that will take place, I feel...