Advertisement

Listings

Of Note

At Harvard

The Game Your friends come up from Yale--what to do? You go to the game, have a bad beer or two, and munch raw U.C. burgers. Then you go into the stands and watch that spheroid hurl down the field into the hands of Yale players. (We're going to lose.) But you'll pretend to have fun in the 20 degree weather anyway, discussing with your butt-cold friends your plans for the evening. Of course, there's always a chance that the Crimson will actually play a good game--it happened, after all, as recently as 1990 in New Haven. That would give us reason to cheer. Yay.

God at Harvard Dr. Ravi Zacharias is set to speak at next year's Evangelical mega-event, Urbana. This Thurday evening he speaks at the Law School. Followed by an a cappela concert by Under Construction on Wednesday. Now there's something different--an a cappela concert at Harvard! We can't get enough of this stuff.

Almost Pulitzer Marvin's Room almost won a Pulitzer this year--maybe it should have. 8 p.m. daily at the Hasty Pudding Theatre. Call 496-8400 for more information. 19 November Thursday

Concert

Advertisement

Harvard Institute for Learning in Retirement. Clarinetist William Lipscomb, Cellist Poppy Dorsam and pianist Rowland Sturges will perform chamber music by Beethoven and Brahms. Blacksmith House, Spiegel Performance Hall, 56 Brattle St., 3:15 p.m. Free.

Films

Harvard Film Archive. Thelma and Louise at 10 p.m. Carpenter Center for the Visual Arts. $4 for students and seniors; $5 for general admission.

Lecture

Is Atheism Dead? Is God Alive? By Dr. Ravi Zacharias, Christian apologist. Ames Courtroom, Austin Hall, Harvard Law School, 7 p.m.

Theatre

Titus Andronicus. By William Shakespeare. Directed by Hans Canosa. Produced by Emily Brodsky. Shakespeare's horror flick: Titus Returns. A carnival of decay. Loeb Ex, 7:30 p.m. Free.

The Fantasticks. By Tom Jones and Harvey Schmidt. Directed by Mandy Silber. Produced by Christine Hahn. The longest-running musical in the world--with good reason. An intimate, timeless story of forbidden love. Leverett Old Library, 8 p.m. $5 for general admission; $4 for students; $3 for Leverett residents.

Into the Woods. By James Lapine and Stephen Sondheim. Directed by John Weinstein. Produced by Diana Graham and Susanna Witt. Traditional fairytale characters meet in the forest in pursuit of a happy ending. Loeb Mainstage, 8 p.m. $7 for general admission; $5 for students.

Marvin's Room. Through Nov. 29. By Scott McPherson. A comedy of what happens when illness brings estranged members of a family together again. Hasty Pudding Theater, 8 p.m. $18-$30, with a 10 percent discount for Harvard students and seniors on Sunday through Thursday. Tickets are available by calling the Hasty Pudding box office at 496-9400 or through Ticketpro at (800) 828-7080. 20 November Friday

Advertisement