Word: fluxes
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...train during their last two years, have their own policies that are not subject to Medical School control. “The hospitals, not HMS control access in the second two years,” he wrote in an e-mailed statement. “Those policies are in flux and were prior to the AMSA survey.” Bhatt said he hoped the scorecard would prompt medical schools to implement more stringent policies. “Already this is creating quite a bit of noise in the medical community,” Bhatt said...
While the game largely proceeded without technical difficulties, at one point, the Risk Web site noted that users were accidentally allowed to create multiple accounts. Then around 3:30 p.m., in place of the scoreboard, the Web site announced, “Oops, John Drake broke the flux capacitor...give us a minute or two.” John T. Drake ’06 is the “fun czar...
...primarily practical. “One of the major reasons why the Fluxus collection ended up here is because of the study rooms,” Proctor says. Visitors to the museum can enjoy hands-on access to the pieces. “You can actually get the little Flux boxes and take the pieces out and play with the cards and what have you,” Proctor explains. To Proctor, the interest of Fluxus is not simply in the way it dethrones serious culture. Instead, he hopes to illuminate the relationship between art, democracy, and society to provoke...
...fathers of video art—and you find a measly 11,800 images, and only 50 video hits. Even with the emergence of potential resources such as YouTube, video art remains obscure for those not plugged in to the art world. E-Flux Video Rental, a video art exhibition in the Carpenter Center’s Sert Gallery set to conclude on April 13, has tried to rectify that situation, with some measure of success.“E-flux was an intervention that called attention to this medium that was supposed to be really cheap and easy...
...filled with items that look like they might be found in a Twilight Zone version of an average grocery or toy store.Although at first glance the objects appear ordinary, nothing is what it seems. A clock measures circumference rather than time (Per Kirkeby’s “Flux Clock,” 1969); a musical score reads only, “Keep walking intently” (Takehisa Kosugi’s “Theatre Music,” 1964). But this subversion of reality is not wholly unsettling. In fact, I laughed out loud for the first...