by Richard Pickering | Aug 4, 2011 | The Public Humanist
There are few things as lovely as a garden picnic on a temperate August day. Plymouth’s One Play, One Community: Romeo & Juliet first sprouted in an Olmsted bower reminiscent of Shakespeare’s Forest of Arden, a green world filled with faeries, rude...
by Tom Vannah | Aug 4, 2011 | Wellness
When Amanda Abramson joined a dozen of her co-workers at a few of Saga Communications’ local radio stations in plans to participate in the famously grueling Tough Mudder at Mount Snow in May—the 13-person team called itself the “Dirty Mudder...
by Magdalene Nutter | Aug 4, 2011 | Wellness
With everything else worth worrying about in today’s world, remembering to slather on the sunscreen when you go outside probably isn’t very high on the list—especially since we live in a culture obsessed with maintaining perfectly bronzed skin and...
by Chris Rohmann | Aug 4, 2011 | Stage
By now, nearly all of the 10 productions on Shakespeare & Company’s summer schedule have opened. Most will be running in repertory until Labor Day. I’ve seen half of them so far, including one that has now closed. That was Women of Will, Tina...
by Our Readers | Aug 4, 2011 | News
Corporate Welfare Cheats It is about time someone discussed the issue of corporate welfare and the oligarchs who crowd out the interests of the common man in the lobbies of Congress. Stephanie Kraft (“Rising Margins, Falling Wages,” July 28, 2011) mentions...