Word: conveyer
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 2000-2009
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...pottery had always had a significant impact on her, as had recently visiting Odundo’s exhibiton “Black Womanhood” at Wellesley College. “Her forms are very, very beautiful, very elegant.” And Odundo made certain to convey her unwavering love for the art form while discussing her specific exhibitions and her work’s artistic importance. “I’m very passionate about clay,” she said. “I’m actually obsessively passionate about clay...
...Law”—to the profound—“Joy and Sorrow” and “Death.” The language is simple, making repeated use of nature as an illustrative symbol. Gibran indeed relies heavily on lyrical analogies to convey his philosophical theories. For those among us unversed in reading pure philosophy, Gibran is thus doing us a favor. On child-rearing, for instance, he writes: “Your children are not your children / they come through you but not from you / and though they are with you yet they...
...Iran, a country headed by Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who has asserted that wiping Israel off the map is “a very wise statement.” Although Silverman calls Obama’s foreign policy “more stabilizing” for Israel, this opinion fails to convey the magnitude of what is at stake. National Review columnist Anne Bayefsky best articulates this viewpoint, writing that “since the time of Hitler, civilization has never been so close to the brink of total catastrophe” in reference to a possible nuclear attack by Iran...
...Both Zafran and Audrey A. White ’10, the Dems’ campaigns director, convey an infectious energy about the election. White says that the number of new people getting involved in canvassing trips is “phenomenal.” Even their most hardcore of Hillary supporters have now fully converted to the Obama camp (see story, page C21). Zafran says that he is optimistic about the youth vote in this election, calling the number of volunteers “astounding...
...parents behind them and their parents behind them, and so on. He asks us to trace our entire lineage through the veins of a fallen tree leaf, which was given out before the play commenced. The point of this simple exercise of the mind, and of imagination, is to convey how every audience member watching “Mnemonic” comes from a common ancestor. Remembering such a bizarre scenario will definitely not require any sort of mnemonic device. The same could be said for the rest of the play, which will run at the New College Theatre through...