Articles
How the Crimes Happened
Dawn Potter’s newest collection of poems, How the Crimes Happened, is filled with brilliant contrasts. Elegant form and literary influence clash and reform up against (post)modern American English. The pope, adorned in Christmas regalia, “looks terrible. / . . . and sags to one side like a cat.” His image flickers from the television at
North Haven band taps into styles, defies categorization
On a moonless night, January the 13th, Waterman’s Community Center in North Haven is virtually empty 15 minutes before showtime. The poster has showtime listed as 7:30, and by then, the John Wulp Theater is nearly full. Ranging in age from 3 to 70, the crowd has shown up to root for the home team:
FAMILY TRADITION: On North Haven, Brown’s is a community institution
J.O. Brown & Sons boat yard: On North Haven this phrase is as deeply ingrained in the daily vocabulary as are the worn paths of foot traffic across the 150-year-old building’s floorboards. More often than not, the phrase is shortened: “headin’ down to Brown’s,” someone might say, and there is no question what the terse
North Haven graduates hold forum
North Haven Arts and Enrichment hosted the 7th annual graduate forum this year on Jan. 4 at Waterman’s Community Center. High school students and teachers attended the hour and a half long meeting run by recent graduates of North Haven Community School (NHCS). Jacqueline Curtis (`03) and Mina Bartovics (`03). Laura Barrett(`04), Jamie Lane (`05),