Word: waited
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...wait until Junior Parents Weekend to discover the Fogg Art Museum! This squat neoclassical building is truly one of the treasures of Harvard's campus, boasting a surprisingly superb and broad collection of paintings and sculpture. The exhibits are self-contained and easily manageable in an afternoon, so there's no need to wade through acres of Post-Impressionist gaffes before you find a masterpiece. Particularly noteworthy are the installations of abstract art, German expressionism and the Impressionists, the latter containing an absolutely terrific Van Gogh self-portrait. Plus, it's all FREE with your Harvard I.D. FREE! That...
...these young men, who in the words of Cornel West, new recognize that their ideas of themselves as Harvard students free to roam the University and Cambridge now "rests on puding." I wonder when the African-American men of Claverly Hall and their tutor will no longer have to wait. Most of all, I wonder when University Hall will practice what it preaches. ALVIN B. TILLERY, JR. March...
...enjoy Reversing Relations with Former Adversaries: U. S. Foreign Policy after the Cold War. The book might also be useful to government concentrators looking for a way to sidestep heavy reading in an international relations class. Students who do not fit into one of these categories might want to wait for the movie...
...case you haven't heard, the wildly overrated writer-director of Pulp Fiction and Jackie Brown has decided to amuse and confound the New York theater scene by accepting a part in a much-ballyhooed revival of Frederick Knott's classic 1966 thriller, Wait Until Dark. Tarantino plays Harry Roat, a ruthless drug smuggler who coerces two small-time hoods (Stephen Lang and Juan Hernandez) into helping him recover a shipment of heroin hidden in the apartment of an unwitting couple. When they discover that Suzy (Marisa Tomei), the homebound wife, is blind, the crooks wait for her husband...
...great concept. It's a great script. It even spawned a great screen adaptation with Audrey Hepburn and Alan Arkin. Do yourself a favor and rent the video. Don't bother forking over sixty dollars at the Wilbur Theater, where Wait is waiting out its pre-Broadway run. Director Leonard Foglia's half-hearted stage rendering has its moments, but the production as a whole hovers somewhere between mediocrity and patent ineptitude...