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...stomachs. Accustomed to rational governance, we cannot imagine what an irrational system would look and sound like. The dictatorship in “V for Vendetta,” for all its evil, attacks entirely predictable targets in entirely predictable ways. What we do not see is random and senseless terror directed at shifting categories such as “anti-Aryan,” “kulak,” or “counter-revolutionary” elements. Never do we see the government in “V for Vendetaa” kill people merely...
...them. In the back of their minds they all realize that they will eventually have singles where they can sit by themselves thinking, “Why am I so lonely? Why do I hate everyone?” House Pride In the olden days, housing assignments were not random and all the minorities on campus lived in the Quad. Having grown tired of explaining why all the white people lived in the best houses, the administration instituted a random lottery. Technically speaking, then, house pride should have wasted away and died, like your hopes of a fulfilling life...
...himself. Diana L. Link ’08, who also lives in E-entryway, said that although she did not see anything suspicious on Friday, she was concerned after reading the open-list e-mails. “I was a little worried, but only because there was this random person walking around,” she said. “I wasn’t sure what was going on.” Although almost every door in Cabot requires a swipe card, Zhang said that many students enter unchecked through the dining hall. “There...
...said. “So, it should have been stolen.” Students speculated widely as to the identity of the perpetrator and his motives. “My inclination was to think it was a sort of freshman-welcome prank, but that’s a random trick to play,” said Leng. “Somebody who was drunk said, ‘I hate that thing,’ and just took it down,” proposed Joseph F. Medioli ’08, citing the frequent weekend parties in Currier as perfect...
...Lambarena,” and the return of last season’ favorite, “Plan to B.” Helen Pickett’s “Etesian” introduces the evening of dance. Though perhaps the most innovative of the four, with its random interludes of silence and truly modern movements, it is also the most technically lacking performance, often danced without basic unison. The muted mood often tries to substitute dramatic lighting and set design for technical dance. Despite a false start and some occasionally shaky ensemble work at their March 17 performance...