Word: laurels
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...peers.Empty seats early in the session left some wondering whether the requisite one-sixth of the Faculty would show up to conduct a binding vote.“It was close, there were a lot of people out of town,” Faculty Council Vice Chair Laurel Thatcher Ulrich said after the meeting.But after a few professors trickled in late, the Faculty achieved a quorum and approved the legislation overwhelmingly by voice vote.The first bill bars departments from restricting sophomore fall courses to would-be concentrators. But it allows them to declare certain courses as prerequisites for entering...
...forget.” Her work, “New York Burning,” which studies an 18th-century slave rebellion in New York City, is part of that tradition, Lepore said.Reached in his office yesterday afternoon, Gordon expressed delight over his department’s Pulitzer laurels. “It’s all reflected glory for me,” Gordon said, “but I’m happy it happened when I was chair of the department.”“We’ve doubled our active duty roster from...
Simon J. Williams ’09 also proves himself a strong new talent to watch as Mr. Mosquet; he has a fine comic touch as a beleaguered pharmacist with a grudge against Parpalaid who eventually becomes Dr. Knock’s first disciple. Laurel T. Holland ’06 performs also well as the “Lady in Violet,” an ingenuous rich actress who is easily convinced of her need for Dr. Knock’s restorative talents. She brings a delightful flippancy and self-awareness to her role...
...past before leaving it behind, “Pelican” tells the story of a mother (Jennifer J. Malin ’09)—presumably the dead man’s wife—who starves her children (Barry A. Shafrin ’09 and Laurel T. Holland ’09) and allows them to suffer neglect, sexual trauma, and domestic abuse. The show’s title refers to a myth that pelicans feed their young with their blood, if necessary. Their father’s death sets in motion a chain of events...
...Actress Laurel T. Holland ’06 explains that for her role as the plain and abused daughter, Gerda, “Rowan invested a lot of faith in me beyond the persona of what Laurel Holland appears to be. It is harder to play the roles that are more pained, and it is easier to play the ostentatious roles,” she says...