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NEWS
By Amy E. Schwartz
Friday, May 27, 1983
A UDIENCES at English comedies written before 1800 usually spend the first act on the edge of their seats, so
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NEWS
By Amy E. Schwartz
Wednesday, May 4, 1983
E VERY EVENING this week at the Loeb, upwards of 40 talented people have convened to pour their creative energies
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NEWS
By Amy E. Schwartz
Friday, April 15, 1983
T HE MOST STRIKING theatrical effect in the Boston Shakespeare Company's current production of Julius Caesar is one that Shakespeare
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NEWS
By Amy E. Schwartz
Thursday, April 7, 1983
S OME OF US, the sensible ones, never doubted that Monty Python had an inside line on the meaning of
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NEWS
By Amy E. Schwartz
Wednesday, March 16, 1983
A pre-housing lottery maniac once described Lowell House "a place where you'll get a lot of wear out of a
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NEWS
By Amy E. Schwartz
Monday, February 28, 1983
MOST BOOK JACKETS are meaningless eye catchers, but the designer of Madeleine L 'Engle's latest novel exhibits a starting perspicacity.
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NEWS
By Amy E. Schwartz
Tuesday, February 15, 1983
EVERYONE knows someone who blames the SAT for getting him rejected from the school of his choice, but when the
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NEWS
By Amy E. Schwartz
Wednesday, February 2, 1983
Tommy's Lunch hit the quarter-century mark yesterday, which means that Harvard procrastinators have been playing pinball and drinking coffee under
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NEWS
By Amy E. Schwartz
Monday, January 24, 1983
G GETTING AT recalcitrant students through their pocketbooks is no new strategy for the federal government. The most recent parallel
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NEWS
By Amy E. Schwartz
Wednesday, December 8, 1982
T urning a concert into a seasonal event is easy in December just tack on the words "Christmas concert" and
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