Word: reaction
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...Tutschku says of his work. “It is not fixed like a regular photo exhibit,” he adds. “You can discover something new about it every time you see it. It has a lot to do with my interest in action and reaction.” ENDS AND BEGINNINGS Tutschku emphasizes the fact that he wants viewers to be able to explore his work at length, if they so desire. “The key word for my life is curiosity,” he says...
...romance. Enter Anna Molyneux (Connie Nielson of “Gladiator”), an empathic and attractive blonde reporter who, when she is not gazing at a love interest, spends most of her time looking around in helpless horror. You can’t blame her for her reaction to the situation in Iraq, but her constant vulnerability does not help make her a compelling protagonist. Anna’s real role in the film is as a point in common among the different sides of the conflict. Her boyfriend Dan (Damian Lewis) is a liberal but desensitized American military...
...realized that I wasn’t necessarily being true to what I enjoyed writing the most,” she says. Benjamin began experimenting with new avenues of writing and eventually realized that each of her seemingly unrelated scenes were populated by the same characters. ACTION AND REACTION When Guha, a student at the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, heard Benjamin read her scenes in class, she was impressed by the fact that Benjamin “had broken all the rules she had set up for herself in the previous scene” and approached Benjamin about...
...like immigration reform and U.S. agriculture subsidies - because most of its nations refused to back his Iraq invasion. Since then, much of the region has turned leftward and anti-U.S. Bush was reminded about this at each stop of his five-nation tour - and each time his initial reaction was to hunch his shoulders, flash that exasperated look and angrily deny...
...there was one thing that hinted at the potential success of that strategy, it was the fevered reaction of the de facto leader of Latin America's resurgent left, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez. For years, the Administration has been falling into Chavez's traps - usually by taking the bait whenever he goes into one of his intemperate anti-Bush tirades: Chavez calls Bush a "donkey," the Administration calls Chavez a menace, Chavez's poll numbers rise. But this time Chavez looked a bit like the dupe: rather than ignoring Bush's fence-mending foray, Chavez frantically crisscrossed the continent, heckling...