Word: usher
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...Tuned In,” both a student-run and student-friendly show, will usher Harvard students back into the Theatre in a performative capacity, foreshadowing Saturday’s Cultural Rhythms festival and spring performances by the Harvard-Radcliffe Orchestra, the Harvard-Radcliffe Collegium Musicum, the Harvard Glee Club, and the Harvard Krokodiloes, among others...
...dance sequence at the Capulets’ party, which is easily the strangest sequence in the play. It is hard to tell whether the director is to be commended or condemned for having the characters “vogue” to classical music and line-dance to Usher. However, choreographed by Doug Elkins, the sequence is undeniably and surrealistically entertaining, if a trifle sacrilegious. The set is just about the only thing that is stark and minimal about the production; yet even in its industrial appearance, it is as striking and visually stunning...
...Brown sounds as though he has already spent time under the covers, but it will be a few years before he can say how it makes him feel with any honesty. Instead he makes like a mini-Usher and sings as if entertainment were the only thing in the world that matters. On the bona fide radio hits--Run It!, Yo (Excuse Me Miss), Gimme That--he has enough discipline to let the hooks do their work, while on the remaining tracks his charm and clean voice rise above a synthesizer that comes on stronger than Colt 45--era Billy...
...that put egalitarian ideals to shame. If equality is truly to be the maxim by which Americans lead their lives, they should strive not to be one people, but, rather, one person. Eliminate inequality, and enforce equality with all the might our hefty $30 billion endowment has to offer. Usher in an age of glorious homogeneity! Life isn’t fair. That’s where Harvard should come in. James H. O’Keefe ’09, a Crimson editorial editor, lives in Grays Hall...
...Nikki moves on to executive status at The Crimson, 2006 will usher in a brand new column, and so it’s time to wrap things up. It’s not quite reading period yet, but here’s a refresher course in the most essential subjects I’ve addressed since starting the column this spring. Think of it as SparkNotes for your Harvard troubles...