Word: garbers
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Remember when Leonardo DiCaprio fired guns called “Longswords” in that film version of Romeo and Juliet? Let Professor Marjorie Garber take your understanding of past and present one step further with a course that explores the interaction of Shakespeare’s plays with “Freud and Marx, Brecht and Beckett, film, contemporary politics, and American popular culture.” And you thought Henry V had nothing to do with the war in Iraq...
...imagine this isn't the first time Lamont has needed to have spring-cleaning in the fall. The library has been associated with anonymous gay sex since at least the mid-sixties. The writer Andrew Holleran (nee C. Eric Garber '65), in his autobiographic essay, "My Harvard," remembers the Lamont johns as a place replete with "advertisements for nude wrestling scrawled on the doors in Magic Marker." Once, "when a hand reached under the partition between the toilet stalls and stroked [his] left leg; [he] stood up, horrified, pulled [his] pants on and left." Holleran later came...
...Form.” Other courses include Quantitative Reasoning 48, “Bits,” taught by McKay Professor of Computer Science Harry R. Lewis, and English 125, “Shakespeare and Modern Culture,” taught by Visual and Environmental Studies Department Chair Marjorie Garber. Students taking these classes through the Extension school pay $650 to take the class for no credit or Extension School credit, and $1,575 for graduate credit. The one exception is “Bits,” which charges $1,575 for noncredit, undergraduate, and graduate credit...
...students will be able to move along “Global Pathways” with Homi Bhabha, study “Literature and Human Suffering” with James Engell ’73, and explore “Arts and Minds” with Julie Buckler and Marjorie Garber...
...league will soon announce expansion, with a new franchise going to Toronto. Garber expects to have 16 teams by 2010. He is more than aware that soccer in the U.S. has been more promise than delivery. But the global game in one of the most globalized countries now makes sense. "The people who don't believe never will," he says. "The people who believe always will. Now we're converting people who were on the fence...