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...resonance to the spoken parts, the Museum is actually a better setting for the play than the traditional outdoor stage at Salzburg. Since the play, the setting, the costumes, and the organ are baroque, it is only natural that the acting should also be somewhat in the heroic vein. Any attempt at a careful realism would have destroyed the spirit and effect of the play...

Author: By R. S. F., | Title: PLAYGOER | 4/22/2004 | See Source »

...category of peace rumors follows a very realistic vein. Thus, as a current rumor has it, Lloyds of London is betting that there will be peace in six months. Undoubtedly this is literally true. Lloyds will issue policies on the continuance or discontinuance of the war. But the implication which the story always carries when told here is that Lloyds is betting better than even odds that peace will come. Representatives of Lloyds here in Boston were unable to give any precise figures, but granted, as did other British officials, the absurdity of the implication...

Author: By Robert H. Knapp, | Title: RUMOR STRATEGY POINTS WAY TO COMING PEACE OFFENSIVE | 4/22/2004 | See Source »

This story of a 1985 Andes mountain-climbing disaster comes courtesy of director Kevin MacDonald, whose film One Day in September won the Oscar for Best Documentary a few years ago. But in the vein of his last work, Touching the Void, is not a clear-cut documentary; the events it examines are real, but MacDonald uses re-enactments of the story’s events to supplement a narrated account from the disaster’s survivors. The nut of their crisis: halfway through a climb, one of the two team members falls and breaks several leg bones...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Happening | 4/16/2004 | See Source »

...finally give students something they have long called for: a centrally located student center. If College housing in Allston is indeed inevitable, Harvard should look into developing plans for an exciting new center located along the river bank—or even better above the river itself in the vein of the historic Ponte Vecchio in Florence, Italy. Harvard should even consider the possibility of building underneath the river itself; the University of Arizona recently completed a cutting-edge 119,000 square foot underground learning center in the heart of its campus...

Author: By The Crimson Staff, | Title: The Allston Challenge | 4/6/2004 | See Source »

...such admirable drive and direction, then perhaps that’s an indicator of alignment with the sprawled-on-a-bed, lolling-on-a-futon, singing-along-with-KISS108 studying style. Not that there’s anything wrong with that. I would argue (in an admittedly self-justifying vein) that the sight of other people working hard can indeed prove the ultimate de-motivator, robbing us of the ability to feel sorry for ourselves and wallow in the self-induced misery of serial procrastination. The solitary all-nighter-as-penance (with nothing but occasional bonding sessions with the vending...

Author: By Amelia E. Lester, | Title: The Lure of Lamont | 4/6/2004 | See Source »

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