Word: beatings
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...moving. Its transitions are marked by a staccato of percussive sounds—lively, yet portentous. A line of lights on a wall in the set also turns rhythmically on and off to further demarcate transitions. As if to the drums of war, the play marches to an internal beat, and its fury of personal devastation crescendos to the climactic shattering of the play’s illusions. The set design under the direction of David Reynoso is precise and meticulous in its details, and most importantly, it works. A string of mutilated doll parts hangs ominously over the milieu...
...Yale won the Vogel Cup for most team points in the regatta, a repeat of its win last year. The Bulldogs narrowly beat out the Tigers for the overall title, amassing 30 points to Princeton’s 29. Hampered by the penalty, the Crimson totaled 24 points...
...34—Another bad snap bounces off Winters hand into the hands of Ho, who decides to run up the middle for a 27-yard touchdown. Former Sports chair and football beat writer Brad Hinshelwood shares witty banter with Matt Luft about you diagram that play. CRIMSON 28, WHITE...
...listen to, both for its genre-bending appeal and for its own musical merit. “Fingers” also succeeds in these same respects. Sounding more like a Beatles ballad than anything else, the track integrates staccato piano chords, a marching beat, and some impressive orchestration to give it a simultaneously fresh and dated feel. While the lyrics are a bit more hit or miss (“And the fingers of your mind / Have wrapped around my spine / And made me feel so blind”), the retro yet contemporary feel is more than engaging enough...
...It’s good to be funny—audiences love funny punch lines,” he says. “Also there has to be a tight flow, in the way you string things together and how you have to mold the words to accentuate the beat. The master is able to weave all these things together.”For Shaket and the other participants of OUTWIT, winning will mean measuring up to the event’s namesake. “We call it a battle of the wits,” Zhang says...