Word: mcleod
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...estimate levels of depression in an effort to reach out to students who were unresponsive to standard testing methods. “It’s a double-edged sword, because it allows us to reach people we wouldn’t have otherwise,” said Mark McLeod, director of the university counseling center at Emory, to The Chronicle of Higher Education. “But the students can say whatever they want and then turn off the computer when the going gets rough.” This approach was considered to be a more logical approach...
...this Athena Theater Company (ATC) production, the characters hardly resemble their Shakespearean counterparts. Desdemona (Beth R. McLeod ’08), as opposed to being the faithful wife and innocent victim of her husband’s jealousy, emerges as a woman longing to live beyond the role of the traditional wife. She has turned to sleeping with the men of her husband’s company in an attempt to escape the confines of her existence...
...Desdemona, McLeod expresses the character’s loneliness and vivacity with a fitting sense of aristocratic entitlement. But it is Bianca who really makes an impression. Despite little stage time, Chan steals the spotlight and brings depth to Bianca by simultaneously expressing her exterior confidence and inner vulnerability, with more plausibility than the range of emotions attributed to such a flimsy character would initially suggest. Resnick also succeeds in channeling Emilia’s bitterness and repression, although, consequently, her character pales in comparison to the dynamism of the other two women. The most engaging moments, however, come when...
...Director Rebecca J. Levy ’06, “Desdemona” is a comedic rewrite of Shakespeare’s famed tragedy “Othello.” Told from a purely female perspective, the play features the three-person cast of Beth R. McLeod as Desdemona, Anna M. Resnick ’09 as Desdemona’s maid Emilia, and Julia C.W. Chan ’05 as the prostitute Bianca. Levy writes in an e-mail, “I picked ‘Desdemona’ because it is extremely well written...
...Bagdis, and safety Doug Hewlett. Brown’s Nick Hartigan, who led the nation in rushing and propelled the Bears to their first outright Ivy title, was named the unanimous Ivy Player of the Year. Six other Brown players were named to the first team. Yale tailback Mike McLeod was named Rookie of the Year. On the other end of the spectrum, Columbia—who finished the season without a win in the Ivy league—had no first team nominations. —LISA J. KENNELLY