Word: elements
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
While the committee will look at the policy in full, UC Vice President Randall S. Sarafa ’09 said a provision that holds club leaders responsible for alcohol use that occurs at their organizations’ parties is a key element that needs to be examined...
...well as the dissemination of that content for consumption. Facebook, YouTube, and Wikipedia all fall under the scope of new media, as do video games and interactive art exhibits like “Lossless.” In fact, “Lossless” utilizes several new media elements. Besides its methods of image distortion, the project’s online element includes a Wiki—or user-modifiable Web page—that holds pictures and information about the exhibit and related projects...
...same format,” he says. But this concern continues to be addressed by those who work with new media. “Lossless” utilizes more than one format, allowing for an immersive viewing experience in the gallery and, through the Wiki, a more informational element that can be explored and edited from any computer. Likewise, student groups like The Advocate have used new media to allow for expansion into new formats so that different types of content can be shared with the Harvard community. The nebulous nature of new media may make it difficult to address...
...hand modestly and sat back down. “I think it’s very important to act on instinct, and I try to do that,” Brown said. Though Brown’s movement has often been described as structured and geometric, she highlighted the element of improvisation that is so integral to her work. During the late 1960s she choreographed a series of gravity-defying dances now known as “equipment” pieces—in which harnessed dancers walked down the sides of buildings and on rooftops—that received...
...celebratory home crowd rushing the field indicated that it was anything but, leading The Crimson to print its famed headline “Harvard beats Yale 29-29.” Gary L. Singleterry ’70, Harvard’s punter, says that there was no element of disappointment in the Game’s final outcome, since no one had given the Crimson much of a chance. “For us to tie was a great moral victory. It was phenomenal,” he recalls.Peter D. Lennon ’70, the writer...