Word: explained
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Clarke seems distinctly, and unashamedly, unaware of what she has done with this show. At a discussion with Clarke last Monday sponsored by the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Studies, facilitator John Rockwell’s voice rang with exasperation as he pushed Clarke to explain her interpretation. Did a feminist interpretation, he asked, determine the play’s opening scenes—which feature Karen MacDonald as an impudent Hippolyta, swollen with mute resentment of her husband Theseus (John Campion), the top-heavy emblem of dour autocratic unreasonableness? Clarke didn’t think so. “Quite...
Part of the explanation, I believe, is that their lives fall apart because all they understand is movies, and they are unsure how to live without that stabilizing force. It doesn’t explain enough though. There are many good ideas in this movie, which made me feel it was worthwhile to see it; it is adventurous in a way that few modern films are allowed to be. Sadly, the content doesn’t measure up to the ambition, making the thought of what this could have been all the more disappointing...
...particularly frustrated with the lackluster work of Dean of the Faculty William C. Kirby, who has apparently done little to better the relationship between FAS professors and the president. Kirby should try to get more information to professors who are feeling disenfranchised and deceived, or at least explain to them why they aren’t being consulted. Instead, Kirby stayed mum while his Faculty was given a blunt message from President Summers in November: that, like it or not, they don’t have a vote when it comes to Allston...
Bernakevitch is the smallest of the three at 6’1, 195 pounds, which helps explain why the line has been so solid defensively and so hard to knock off the puck. Packard (6’5, 225) leads the team with a plus-13 rating, and Bernakevitch is second among forwards at plus...
...maze of tangled video controllers on the floor complete the decor. “The videogames set the stage,” explains Joe A. Dottino ’07. “We’re a big Halo room,” the boys collectively concede. On a typical night, they say, after an hour or so of studying, one roommate will decide to take a Halo break. But the boys explain that fifteen minutes actually means an hour, “and since no one can end on a losing streak, you keep playing until your luck...