Word: clue
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...recently re-explored in “Lost in Translation.” Unfortunately, the film doesn’t take enough risks to add anything to the subject. The movie seems relentlessly obsessed with detailing the quirks and mundanities of life, but somehow forgets to clue the audience in to why exactly it is they’ve bothered to tear themselves away from their own lives to witness this exercise in filmmaking.At the end of the day, even the mighty combination of Claire Danes and one of the most hilariously awkward sex scenes ever filmed can?...
...mail from Faulkner-Bond describes a planned scavenger hunt to precede the dinner, including “clue cards [and] limos.” According to an Oct. 2 e-mail by Isis punchmaster Stephanie T. Chevalier ’07, “the scavenger hunt preceding final dinner is 100% Confidential and should be kept top secret...
...EVENT 4 (FINAL DINNER): Tuesday, 11/8, Delphic. Dinner will be preceded by an afternoon scavenger hut in Boston involving punches, members, clue cards, limos, etc. Details pending, but block off the afternoon & evening...
...following is not the name of a recent Harvard football standout? Kevin Rogus, Carl Morris, and Dante Balestracci.A sharp-shooter for the basketball team, stud wide receiver, and fierce middle linebacker, respectively. All three athletes had four freshmen pick them out (two simply didn’t have a clue). The budding statisticians and sociologists among the readership will surely be quick to point out the bias of self-selection present in this study: those most interested in Harvard athletics would be those who took the time to answer the e-mail. Because of this, the pathetically small sample size...
...Xeno Chronicles” leaves the reader with little clue of what the future of xenotransplantion will hold, and whether xenotransplantation or stem cell-generated organs will win the race to supply our species with replacement organs. (The scientific community generally believes that at least one technique will be successful over the long haul.) The cliffhanger is warranted, since a snapshot of scientific research, as Miller provides, will generally give a murky picture of the future, especially, as in Sachs’ case, when funding is running perilously...