Glover, Slyde to tap tomorrow
If you have never seen tap dancing up close than you are really missing some of the most exciting and intense dancing ever performed.
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If you have never seen tap dancing up close than you are really missing some of the most exciting and intense dancing ever performed.
Two plays, "Tom Thumb" and "The Author's Farce," open in the Warner Bentley Theater tonight in a double bill that focuses on the pros and cons of censorship of art.
What do you know about AIDS? Well if the answer is not very much or even if it isn't, there is an extremely interesting exhibit of posters compiled by RAID (Responsible Aids Information at Dartmouth) on display in the Collis Commonground all day today and tomorrow.
How do you begin to describe a paragon? "Brilliant, powerful, a virtuouso." "Elegant, interpretive, one of the great ones."
If you could think of twenty movies you would really like to see this term what would they be? Well, the Dartmouth Film Society as usual tries to answer just that question and this term comes up with an unusually interesting selection, addressing provocative issues of race, sex, nationality and experience in a series named "Border Crossings."
"Sunday in the Park with George," presented yesterday in Center Theater by Circa '21 productions, is a moving look into the lives of two artists and the various conflicts that love and art create in their lives.
Solo violinist Scott Yoo, with flagellating horse hair disengaged by his ferocious bowing, provided an exciting and extremely entertaining performance in Spaulding Auditorium last night.