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Word: exhibiter (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...exhibit ranges from portraits to cityscapes to glimpses into the studio life. Cassatt's severe and pensive mother makes a showing in drab black dress, a prim contrast to Thomas Hovenden's slumped self-portrait (1875). But the star of the show is John Singer Sargent's notorious Madame X (1884), herself an American transplant who moved to Paris as a child, and who, like her expat painter, would always be an outsider in her adopted city.

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Abroad Canvas | 10/3/2006 | See Source »

...more I study, and the more easily the subjunctive pluperfect comes to me in conversation, the more I am convinced that some things just don’t translate. Exhibit A: finding an adequate Spanish counterpart for the word “jolly” (the closest we got was “bárbaro” – like “awesome,” but less painfully Californian surfer dude). Exhibit B: explaining the idiom, “to gird up one’s loins.” (My professor’s attempt...

Author: By Grace Tiao | Title: Lost in Translation | 10/3/2006 | See Source »

...Westernism and Islamic fundamentalism; with confrontational people who deny Israel's right to exist and whose violently anti-Israel attitudes overlap with anti-Semitism in such a way that it's hard to tell which animates which. Radical clerics and the people who came up with the Holocaust cartoon exhibit belong to this ideological minority, not my relatives...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Nation of Holocaust Deniers? | 10/2/2006 | See Source »

...unnaturally blue bagels left beside the toaster, so too is the Times’ Arts section rejected when they insist on publishing about inaccessible European shows. But you, my reader beleaguered by that meandering and self-righteous introduction, are in for a treat. This review of an overseas exhibit does contain some of the smugness of the jet-setting art critics I previously scorned—but, with the caveat that all but one of the artists I tout have works that can be seen without leaving the eastern seaboard. Or even your computer for that matter...

Author: By Kristina M. Moore, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Non-Digital Art? That's so 20th Century | 9/30/2006 | See Source »

...team culture. After Toci’s speech, an as-yet unnamed player performed a skit suggesting that running back Clifton G. Dawson ’07 had performed oral sex on Murphy. At a time when our football team has come under such close scrutiny, players need to exhibit better judgment. Our players are, in many ways, the public face of our University. For this reason, their misdemeanors hurt more than their team; they put a blemish on the reputation of the University too. It is always difficult for outsiders to propose a course of change for insular institutions...

Author: By The Crimson Staff, | Title: Strengthening the Defensive Line | 9/27/2006 | See Source »

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