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...Paul Rudnick's new play about the twin evils of censorship and ambition (we're talking art and politics, of course) is its fervent desire to shock. Rudnick, who wrote the Obie-Award-winning "Jeffrey," has mastered the minefield of homosexuality and a Republican Congress--turning up a gem of a play amidst such well-traveled territory. Though this jouncy, stunningly designed production never quite stoops low enough to outrage, the pace is uptempo and the lines clever enough to jolt even the savviest Village person into a laugh of bemused recognition...

Author: By Sarah C. Dry, | Title: Rudnick Turns Politics Into Farce | 5/17/1996 | See Source »

...Wilson's decision to come to Harvard are rather tangential to the subject of race relations. The only significant original piece in the handbook is Thomson Professor of Government Martin L. Kilson's essay on last year's Million Man March and black politics. This essay, while an intellectual gem, seems rather incongruous because it does not address the Harvard campus...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Handbook on Race Is Out of Touch | 4/9/1996 | See Source »

...first gem came only 1:35 gone in the period. Senior Jason Karmanos broke down the left side of the ice towards Owen, drawing the St. Lawrence defender. At the last moment, Karmanos slid the puck to a streaking Higdon, who put away what proved to be the game-winning goal...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Streak Is Over! | 3/9/1996 | See Source »

...scientists, a piece of amber with nothing trapped inside is not so exciting. For artists and their patrons, however, it is an uncut gem. According to Grimaldi, Stone Age artisans used amber found on beaches of the Baltic Sea 10,000 years ago to carve amulets, pendants and tiny figurines. Indeed, Baltic deposits were Western civilization's primary source of amber at least as far back...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: FOREVER AMBER | 2/12/1996 | See Source »

...book is a technothriller, we wouldn't expect lucid, evocative prose, although Davis does present us with the occasional gem: "He cut the corpse's intestines with the sangfroid of an obstetrician clipping a baby's navel cord..." But at other moments Davis lapses into tiresome literary tics, for example, the Amazing, All-In-One Speech Formula: within a few pages, we see people pleading, muttering, snapping, intervening, erupting, venturing, uttering in horror (a personal favorite), inserting furrowing brow in non-comprehension, half-gasping, rebutting, speaking sotto voce (a diving officer, no less), barking, snorting, and chirping...

Author: By Nicolas R. Rapold, | Title: Davis' Death by Fire Just Another Silly Technothriller | 12/14/1995 | See Source »

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