Word: exhibition
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Cambridge Public Schools Public Information Officer Justin T. Martin said that he was confident that the district would continue to exhibit the progress of recent years, despite the stricter regulations...
...addition to cheeseburgers and buffalo chicken flavored pizzas, the café offers late night snack fixes like salads, sandwiches, ice cream, and other desserts. Drink options range from assorted fruit smoothies and frozen lattés to cappuccinos and espressos. The Penthouse Coffee Bar also features a rotating exhibit of student artwork, as well as folk music and larger concerts. On nights without scheduled performances, students can plug their own MP3 players into the café’s sound system. While most students enjoyed the new space, some wondered whether the café would actually be used...
...September 2005, the same month it was issued, on technical and procedural grounds. Machover, who holds dual citizenship in Israel and the United Kingdom, advocated the right of countries not directly affected by war crimes to prosecute suspected Geneva Conventions violators—using Almog as his primary exhibit. Under Almog’s leadership, the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) dropped a one-ton bomb in a residential area of the Gaza Strip to assassinate a Hamas leader, killing the target and his assistant, along with 14 civilians, including nine children, according to news reports at the time. After...
...year " on a new line at the bottom of the e-mail. We're sorry, but we can only accept one photo per reader. Good luck! By submitting your photo, you hereby grant to TIME and Time.com a non-exclusive, perpetual, worldwide license to publish, distribute and exhibit the photo you submit, in any manner and in any medium, without payment to you or any third party. You represent and warrant that you have the right to grant to TIME the license granted herein, and that publication of the photo will not violate the rights of any third party...
MIT’s new interactive art exhibit, “Sensorium: Embodied Experience, Technology, and Contemporary Art,” is like the grown-up, version of Boston’s Museum of Science. The six artists displayed play with the senses to create an interactive, intriguing commentary on the way new interactive technologies are changing the way art is experienced. Tactics as diverse as Scratch-N-Sniff inspired walls, a “touch-tunnel” filled with darkness, sounds, and a strobe light, and Bruce Nauman’s attempts...