Word: nelsons
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Christiana I. Nelson '95 and Matthew P. Damon '91-'92 are appearing in The Speed of Darkness this spring...
...DeSilva '94 Alessandra K. Galloni '95 Mary Louise Kelly '93 Melissa Lee '95 Lan N. Nguyen '93 Philip P. Pan '93 Joshua W. Shenk '93 Ira E. Stoll '94 Mark N. Templeton '93 Maggie S. Tucker '93 Joanna M. Weiss '94 Arts Editor: P. Gregory Maravilla '93 Business Editors: Nelson E. Famadas '93 Young Jin Lee '94 Sports Editor: Ted G. Ross '94 Photo Editors: Susannah Ross '93 Design Editors: James Cham '95 Nancy E. Greene '95 Joseph Madrigrano '95 Dante E. A. Ramos '93 Copy Editor: Sarah G. Matthews...
Such performances lead opponents to call Clinton "Slick Willie." In the partisan opinion of Sheffield Nelson, who lost the 1990 gubernatorial race to Clinton, "He'll be what the people want him to be. He'll do or say what it will take to get elected." Supporters retort that Clinton has merely learned the arts of building coalitions and crafting compromises between opposing views, as a Governor -- or President -- must. True, but a President also should be tough enough to knock heads together on occasion, and Clinton has given little evidence of that ability...
...idea that rivalry between British and American Macbeths could stir their New York City partisans to murderous riot seems almost unimaginably quaint. But in his witty and poignant evocation of the madness of 1849, TWO SHAKESPEAREAN ACTORS, playwright Richard Nelson slyly suggests parallels to our era's battles over supposed Eurocentric cultural imperialism. The play's underlying debate: Is art universal, or does it belong exclusively to its nation of origin? Nelson touches on these matters in glittering moments rather than digging in with Shavian relentlessness. He focuses on three actors: William Charles Macready (Brian Bedford), the English Macbeth...
...down-on-her-luck American anthropologist in Botswana decides it is high time to find a spouse. Into her frame of reference comes Nelson Denoon, who is handsome, charismatic and doing worthy work for indigenous women in the Kalahari Desert. Her narrative of what happens next -- and next -- is both uproariously funny and deeply serious, a long courtship of highs and lows played against an exotic, meticulously described African landscape...