Word: johnson
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Iraq is what has put the President on the eve of a possible rebuke by voters. And if Bush were a different kind of politician--if he loved political jawboning like Lyndon Johnson or could show political elasticity like Bill Clinton--this moment might be less significant. But Bush has perfected the art of governing from inside his razor-thin majority, and is proud above all of his ideological toughness. That's why the midterms could do more than change the balance of power in Washington, if current polls are right and one or both houses shift to Democratic hands...
...show. This loss of irony killed the last quarter of Friday’s production. The extended, on-stage discussion about the state of dance, theater, Broadway, etc. fell entirely flat. I might care to hear professional dancers talk about struggles that are actually theirs, but when Katie W. Johnson ’07, as Cassie, says “I need a job” with tears in her eyes, it rings false.This cast has the unenviable task of making a postmodern, self-aware show work as just a regular show. When they get the emotional connections right...
...Professor of History Walter Johnson noted, interpretations of the historical character of the minutemen have frequently tended to be illusory...
...minuteman’ image is…key to understanding a strain of extreme right and extreme white thought in the United States….a notion of insurgent, state- or locally based militias as legitimate political actors,” Johnson wrote in an e-mail. “This is the political vision that brought you Timothy McVeigh...
...left: Kevin Barlowski, a sophomore at Emerson College, looks on as the cast of “A Chorus Line” rehearses. Top right: Katie W. Johnson ’07—who plays Cassie, one of the leads—dances to “The Music and the Mirror.” Bottom: From right to left, Samantha G. M. Barnard ’09, Sara Collins and Anna Haas, both seniors at Emerson College, Julia A. Rudolf ’10, Katie W. Johnson ’07, and Kristina A. Dominguez...