Word: displayful
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Zakharevich’s program, featured on her website (www.people.harvard.edu/~zakharev), has two parts. The part that a user sees is a display of white boxes, controlled by a Common Gateway Interface (CGI) script, that organizes numbers in a sudoku grid. Another program, written in a computer language called Objective Categorical Abstract Machine Language (OCaml), does the actual number evaluation behind the scenes...
...recalled most of the time being spent not on the number-evaluation component itself but on manipulating the CGI script which controls the sudoku display, making it more user-friendly...
...Chrysler, Morgan Stanley, and Puma, holding events off-campus, where they say Harvard officials can claim no jurisdiction. None of these groups have been scrutinized by the College.According to the Student Organizations Handbook, a student group may accept cash and gifts from a sponsor. And as long as the display isn’t ostentatious, they can acknowledge the company’s contributions and display their affiliation with it publicly. The student group cannot hang advertising banners from Harvard buildings or officially endorse their sponsor’s product, and they’re not allowed to have corporate...
...photographs in the entire gallery. The most emotionally unsettling section is the “Social Museum Collection,” highlighting societal ills and poor conditions of industrial and social life. Orphanages full of sick children, hospitals and women portrayed as victims of domesticity crowd the walls, the display of the prints diminishing the gravity of their content. However, the attention paid to old social settlements of East Coast cities like Boston and the amateur but vivid documenting of those living conditions rescues this section from being yet another cliché collection of society’s flaws...
...same pose,” Wolohojian explains. The proud posture of Degas’ young cousin Giulia Bellelli is the exact mirror of the disdainfully regal pose of the woman in the Renaissance portrait. Wolohjian hopes visitors will see these sorts of connections as they explore the exhibit, on display at the Sackler Museum now through Nov. 27. Unlike Wolohojian, who currently teaches History of Art and Architecture 171w: “Edgar Degas,” I don’t have an expert’s eye for detail, and I’m not used to making...