Word: krim
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...think it is valuable for some more than others," says first-year Brian E. Krim. "Quant is great for those with no quantitative skills, but I know it's not valuable to a good portion of the class...
...Krim, however, says that computer and Internet use is so widespread in classes that those students who do not use the technology every day will soon fall behind...
...Most people have experience with it," Krim says. "But in raw numbers you have a lot of people who have some catching up to do, and they feel like...
Hepatitis (a character, not the disease), played by Kevin Krim '97-'98, is trying to write an appropriate ending to his play so he can win a competition in Ancient Athens. As the lights go up, he and his main character, Diabetes (Adam Green '99), are discussing the philosophical implications of having Zeus appear at the end and save the day. This leads them into a dialogue, which forms the main body of the play, about the nature of man and reality. Among the perplexing propositions they argue over is the question,: is the audience real, or was it created...
...acting suffers because of the lack of dimensionality in the script. How can Stone show any acting skill, when she has to be "the angry boss" from start to finish? The other characters often fall into the same trap. Krim and Lewis are good actors with a bad script. So, their caricatures become borderline annoying, as they do not progress during the course of the play. The audience knows that Rolf, the blond, is dumb after five minutes of the play, but then must listen to every dumb line she submits. Hahs slips on a couple of her lines, which...