Word: revisit
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...evening of six short plays, includes a Tennessee Williams-inspired, gender flipping parody, titled “For Whom the Southern Belle Tolls.”BEYOND HARVARD For Durang, Harvard holds many bittersweet reminders of his undergraduate years—memories that he might revisit this weekend, during his visit.You might find Durang visiting Weld (his freshman dorm), or checking out his old stomping grounds at the Loeb Experimental Theater. It was there that he directed at Harvard for the first time. He insists that “nobody in power at the Loeb saw” the show.On...
...Faculty’s recent vote to shift the concentration deadline back a semester is an opportune time for the government department to revisit the logic behind its sophomore tutorial. It is our hope that over the summer, the government department will contemplate what it is that every government concentrator at Harvard ought to know and revise the sophomore tutorial accordingly...
With a sure-to-be blockbuster movie opening in two weeks, and fiancée Katie Holmes’s figurative cup having, literally, just runneth over with baby, there is no better time to revisit the masterworks of the one-and-only, Brooke Shields playa hatin’, Oprah-couch-jumpin’, scientology-crazed Tom Cruise. So grab the first installment of the “Mission: Impossible” (1996) franchise, sit back, and… TAKE A SHOT: 1. Every time someone is either obviously wearing, or proceeds to remove, an identity-changing mask. Look into...
...York Republican Congressman Peter King has insisted the administration revisit its approval of the transfer of control of U.S. ports to "a company coming out of a country where al Qaeda has such a strong presence," and which could be easily infiltrated by the terrorist network. Democratic Senators Hillary Clinton of New York and Bob Menendez of New Jersey plan to hold hearings on the issue next week, and are seeking legislation banning companies controlled by foreign governments from buying U.S. port facilities. Menendez alleged that the UAE has a "serious and dubious history... as a transit point for terrorism...
...Down In Albion.” It’s not that it’s a terrible album. It’s more that every song from Doherty’s new band sounds like a half-hearted Libertines imitation, a painful attempt to revisit the successful past. Doherty himself has fallen fast and far since the implosion of his last band. The drug problems that led to the erratic touring schedule and apocalyptic lyrics of the Libertines have since spiraled out of control. Doherty is in and out of both jail and the UK tabloids, which have rabidly...