Word: explaine
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...stage. You will just be sloshing back and forth from side-to-side. I will light you from the feet up and the audience will see sparks.’” It was an inexplicable moment of artistic telepathy—one Brown did not care to explain but simply accepted. Therein lies the beauty of her life and work: she embraces the illogical and the unpredictable. At the end of the evening I asked her if she had any advice for pragmatic Harvard students. “Go where the energy is,” she said...
...When Democrats first started dreaming up a powerful think tank like CAP, they studied carefully how conservative organizations like Heritage had been so successful. That would explain the fact that in January Podesta's organization plans to publish a 600-page manuscript called Change for America: A Progressive Blueprint For The 44th President that is consciously modeled on a very similar conservative document produced at the dawn of the Reagan era. That 1,000-page book written by the Heritage Foundation in 1981, Mandate For Leadership, became the blueprint for the incoming administration of Ronald Reagan. The book was placed...
...less arduous. The College’s policies are pushing the Harvard social scene to the periphery. Not only is this push an inevitable outcome of difficult party policies, but the administration actually encourages partying in areas that are difficult to monitor. When asked in an e-mail to explain where students were expected to party during Harvard-Yale weekend, Jason B. McCoy ’08, the SLAO’s Campus Life Fellow, pointed out that “there will be room parties going on in the houses on Friday night,” implying that these...
...Love, you say that surfers are like addicts and that they use waves for a fix. Can you explain? Well, for me, I can never get enough. I mean, I do get satisfied. I do get my fill in a day, I get tired and want to go home and sleep or eat, but the next day if the waves are happening, I'm out there again. It's not something that necessarily gets old. You push yourself to a certain limit and once you've done something new you've want to keep going, you want to do something...
...wrapped up his second week as President-elect, it was clear that Obama was taking the long view in both diplomacy and politics. How else to explain the fact that he had all but offered the most prestigious job in his Cabinet to a woman whose foreign policy experience he once dismissed as consisting of having tea with ambassadors? Or that Clinton might accept an offer from a man whose national-security credentials, she once said, began and ended with "a speech he made in 2002"? Nowhere did Obama and Clinton attack each other more brutally last spring than...