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...where the baroque surroundings seem particularly applicable to this sort of thing. It is 1808, 15 years after the murder of Marat. A row of prison bars separates the audience from the stage, and at center lies the famous bathtub wherein Marat took his last breath. Except, in this tub lies a neurotic asylum patient, playing Marat. And all around him, the large cast of almost 20 twitching, dead-eyed, asylum inmates shuffle about, dressed in dirty white rags, talking to themselves and to their invisible friends. The four-member orchestra looks like heaven's gospel choir, dressed in white...

Author: By Patrick S. Chung, | Title: A Crew of Lunatics | 12/16/1993 | See Source »

Shaeffer, who proposed moving the tub of waste to a location where first-years could easily see it, was enthusiastic about the results of the study thus...

Author: By Carrie L. Zinaman, | Title: Measuring the Waste | 12/13/1993 | See Source »

Shaeffer, who proposed moving the tub of wasteto a location where first-years could easily seeit, was enthusiastic about the results of thestudy thus...

Author: By Carrie L. Zinaman, | Title: Dining Service Audits Food Waste | 12/10/1993 | See Source »

Wasteful students at the Union, the College's largest dining hall, yesterday had the chance to see the product of their profligacy: a large, clear plastic tub of leftover food...

Author: By Jeffrey C. Milder, | Title: Dining Halls Collect, Weigh Waste | 12/4/1993 | See Source »

...institution committed to the organizational principle of "every tub on its own bottom," Lowell's interdict against seeking donors was a terrible omen, one that would re-emerge some six decades later when the museum's director, professor of archaeology Lawrence Stager, would not raise money himself and barred others from doing so besides. But this jumps ahead of the story...

Author: By Martin Peretz, | Title: The Sabotage of The Semitic Museum | 11/29/1993 | See Source »

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