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...effort to address these concerns, supporters of the Clean Elections law have proposed a compromise to fix all three problems. Rep. Jay Kaufman (D-Lexington), among others, has proposed increasing the amount of money needed to receive state funds to $4,500. The compromise would also allow legislators to spend more money on constituent services in non-election years, and it would prevent unopposed candidates from receiving any public money...

Author: By The CRIMSON Staff, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Amending Clean Elections Law | 4/4/2001 | See Source »

...LARAMIE PROJECT The murder of gay student Matthew Shepard in Wyoming was the impetus for Moises Kaufman's unique stage docudrama, constructed entirely from interviews with the witnesses and participants. A pioneering work of theatrical reportage and a powerful stage event...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theater | 12/18/2000 | See Source »

...presumptuously grasping at the Oval Office, so he relied on Cheney's aura of authority and competence to persuade Americans that the race was finally over and Gore should give up. "A lot of you wrote stories back in July that Cheney was a dumb pick," says Ron Kaufman, a G.O.P. consultant who worked in Bush's father's White House. "He sure doesn't look like a dumb pick now, does...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Election 2000: Man In Charge | 12/11/2000 | See Source »

Seeing the person who told you time and time again, always irreverently and arrogantly, that your life was entirely devoid of beauty and replete with artifice publicly humiliated in a court of law should be at least somewhat satisfying. Yet in Moises Kaufman's Gross Indecency: The Three Trials of Oscar Wilde, where the audience is witness to the "Trial of the Century" in which Wilde is accused of being a "posing sodomite," public humiliation reminds us just how closed-minded a society can be, even with regard to one of its famous personalities...

Author: By Nichole B. Usher, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: An Aestheticist's Anguish | 12/8/2000 | See Source »

Though it's clear that Kaufman researched Wilde, for we are continually provided with sources for the dialogues, diary entries and speeches, some of the evidence, especially in the courtroom, tends to drag. It is difficult to tell if Sir Edward Clark (Seth Fenton '01) purposly reads each piece of evidence with as little emotion or sense of sentence flow as possible so that Wilde's exchanges sound juvenile or if Clark is merely reading the evidence unintelligibly...

Author: By Nichole B. Usher, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: An Aestheticist's Anguish | 12/8/2000 | See Source »

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