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1. Yale's new regulations for The Game 2005

Those planning to go to Yale for The Game and stay for the tailgate will soon have to rethink their priorities. A recent crackdown by Yale University has precipitated a number of Harvard-Yale game restrictions, including bans on parties with more twenty people, tailgates after halftime, and alcohol at the Yale-Harvard Dance the night before The Game.
By in News

2. CityStep's "Guilty" throwdown

CityStep's choice of "Guilty" for the theme of its annual fundraising event, uncommon as it is for a nonprofit children's organization, has raised a few eyebrows around campus. In years past, CityStep has held events ranging from parties in Annenberg Hall to formals in venues such as the Park Plaza Hotel.
By in News

3. Food-service revolution in HUDS' Eliot-Kirkland complex

While most reasonable undergraduates were enjoying another hour or two in the comfort of their beds, the manufacture of their breakfasts (and lunches and dinners) marched on underground in the never-ending quest to feed the thousands of undergraduates and graduate students at Harvard.
By in News

4. In MIT dining halls, Big Brother is watching

The inaugural month of my stay at Harvard was marked by a definite aversion toward visiting Annenberg alone. If, in spite of my initial cowardice, I elected to make the trek solo, I would open the door to a sea of faces, lost, confused, and with no clue as to where my friends were sitting.
By in Forum

5. The best of New Haven


By in Forum

6. Point/counterpoint: iPod goes iPorn

Why Apple's latest sin is genius. By Shawn Liu Recently, Apple released its new iPod. In addition to holding your music and your life, this new gadget also has the capability to carry video. That's right: reformatted episodes of your favorite TV series, music videos, movie trailers, even some Pixar shorts.
By in Forum

7. Oliver Stone takes on 9/11

The Hollywood circus that makes a habit of bastardizing tragic events, having reached its pinnacle of disgrace with Pearl Harbor, is planning to outdo itself once again. This time, it is tackling what could perhaps be the most sensitive issue in American history: the September 11 terrorist attacks.
By in Forum

8. A Salient uproar

I'm sure most of us can remember the commotion several weeks ago when the Salient, a student-run conservative periodical, published an ad parodying Muslim culture in the form of a Barbie-style doll named Fulla. For those of you who were too engrossed in your weekly assigned readings, the doll was depicted as making statements like "I am a Muslim woman.
By in Forum

9. CD Review: Digable Planets Beyond the Spectrum: The Creamy Spy Chronicles

Digable Planets is the opposite of popular rap in 2005. While 50-Cent is out and about getting rich and/or dying, Digable Planets is sitting in the living room listening to jazz with a small group of friends, each of whom are named after insects. Digable Planets is composed of three emcees, Doodlebug, Butterfly, and Ladybug (only the first two are guys, in case you couldn't tell).
By in Arts

10. Pride, prejudice, and the popcorn flick

It is a truth universally acknowledged that a woman in possession of literary taste must be in love with Jane Austen. To attempt to adapt an Austen novel for the screen, especially one as beloved (and well known) as Pride and Prejudice, is an extremely risky undertaking.
By in Arts