Word: dubiously
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First, we disagree with the EPC’s logic in recommending that concentration choice be delayed an extra semester. Moving concentration declaration from the end of freshman year to the middle of sophomore year will limit student choice and hinder many concentrations in exchange for a dubious set of benefits. It is true that freshmen schedules are restricted by the need to fulfill their language requirements and complete Expos, and the EPC has argued that students need more time to thoroughly explore fields of potential interest. Another undecided semester would provide that, and it would allow ample contact with...
...Certain areas are hotspots in Boston; these are areas with a lot of student housing,” Pokaski said. “Most of the parties that are going on and disturbing neighbors and have underage drinking are keg parties.” However, he was dubious about whether the ordinance would be a complete solution to the problem. He cited all the loopholes that students might take advantage of in the legislation, such as giving a false address or underage drinkers asking older students to buy the kegs for them. “Do I think it?...
...childlike innocence that entices men—but whether Lulu’s ingenuousness is authentic or invented is dubious. Throughout the play, viewers are drawn to question the truth and depth of Lulu’s innocence and whether her lovers really just care for the purity they have constructed for her. Actresses Julia C.W. Chan ’05, Rebecca J. Levy ’06, Catherine P. Walleck ’06, and Elizabeth A. McLeod ’08—who each play Lulu in her different stages of maturity—do a particularly...
Other times the film is just obscene, such as when Downey accidentally urinates on a (different) dead girl’s body. The film’s most dubious aspect, though, is a bizarre half-baked subplot involving child sexual abuse...
...Lethal Weapon”) most recently directs and writes “Kiss Kiss Bang Bang,” a smart-assed labor of love, both a hokey pulp murder-mystery and satire of same, starring Robert Downey Jr. and Val Kilmer. The film’s most dubious aspect, though, is a bizarre half-baked subplot involving child sexual abuse. In an interview with The Harvard Crimson, Kilmer and Black—either from jet-lag or sheer fatigue of the press junket circuit—dismissively respond to questions about their equally insipid film. The Harvard Crimson...