Word: frostã
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...Fire, Not Ice” choreographed by graduate student Marita L. Sheldon, set the evening’s tone. Five black-clad dancers took to the dimly lit stage and cycled through poses eerily suggestive of death throes as a solemn voice boomed lines from Robert Frost??s apocalyptic poem “Fire and Ice”. Odd mechanical sound effects and a metronomic beating heart underscored the poetry and contributed to the piece’s ominous air. “In,” a jaunty duet performed and choreographed Todorova and Tufts freshman Bistra...
...blindly following orders, and it’s not having someone else make up your mind for you,” she says. NEW OPPORTUNITIES, NEW DANGERSThere is one order, though, the women must follow.Women in the military are barred from direct combat positions. Retired Major General Kathryn G. Frost??who, at the time of her retirement, was the highest ranking woman in the U.S. Army—explains that the reasons are varied. The relative strength and endurance of women is one concern. So is personal hygiene—in a combat situation, women who are menstruating...
...FEMINIST FROST?...
...Kumin embraces the comparison. “I am very pleased to be ‘the feminist Robert Frost??—I can’t think of anything I’d rather be,” Kumin says...
...Perhaps the primary similarity between Kumin’s poems and Frost??s—even more than their common grounding in the New England pastoral landscape—is their sheer accessibility to lay audiences. “I don’t think it requires any special proclivity to appreciate poetry,” Kumin says. “It just needs for you to be there and to hear...