Word: faults
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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That's not Engel's fault. Old, stale, dead material is inherent to the play. Engel's solution effectively takes the edge off this problem. It makes the audience more receptive listeners--somewhat like Dante in Hell, bearing witness to final testimonials and recriminations. But unlike Dante, Masters was fond of his kin; no one is damned. The audience is asked not to judge folk for their failings but to pay attention to the actors' performances and deft versatility. Engel makes acting an integral factor in how memory is constructed...
...think it is an excellent new steering committee," Cohen said. "I don't think you can fault the community. It chose the people who are most active...
Suddenly Dr. Glaspy, who by now had learned that Christy was a Health Net subscriber, found himself walking the fault line between the old medicine and the new. The dimensions of his conflict became clear on Thursday, Sept...
...early 1970s, a parent noticed the designation on the World War II tablet, and wrote, "Surely the influence of Harvard University on the lives of these young men should have created within them something more enduring and worthy of commemoration than the fact that largely due to no fault of their own they found themselves under the necessity of fighting as 'enemies' against the land and people with whom they had shared the riches of academic inquiry...
...forces freely admit that theirs is a coalition of convenience. "Our primary goal is no-fault auto insurance," says Johnson, but he defends the other propositions as well--never mind that the stockholders' initiative is sometimes called "the swindlers' protection act,'' or that Ralph Nader himself is on the No side...