Word: rex
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...Oedipus Rex. By Sophocles. If you thought you knew this script, think again. Immerse yourself in Oedipus and jocasta's surreal and supernatural world and feel their fates unfold. Sound, light and movement transform this classical piece into a frightening and gripping saga of two destinies. Loeb EX, 7:30 p.m. Free...
...plays hip-hop, dancehall, and related music each Saturday, 9 p.m. to 5 a.m. 1."Doris" Shellac 2."Delicate Cutter"Fat Day 3."Thug with a Brain"Rancid Hell Spawn 4."Good Bad Happy Sad"Gaunt 5. "Smear"New Radiant Storm King 6. "Giving Up"The Lune 7."Rex"The Laurels 8."Milk+Melancholy"Rodans 9. "Doubt"Sone 10. "Neurons"King Loser 11. "Over the Floor Out that Door"Monster Truck 5 12. "Stabbing a Star"Guided By Voices 13."American Soul Spiders"New Bomb Turks 14. "No Sleep"Huggybear 15."Doc Ellis"SF Seals 16. "Eye Level"Adickdid...
...million years ago, than many professionals. Since he found his first dinosaur bone, a triceratops vertebra, at age 8, he has scoured the landscape looking for more artifacts of the distant past. Counting his latest discovery, he has found two of the world's 14 known skeletons of Tyrannosaurus rex. Sacrison helped excavate the first last year, only a quarter-mile from his latest find...
...dinosaur burial ground, now a dry, undulating pasture of sage and buffalo grass just below the North Dakota border, was once a subtropical floodplain, where dinosaurs roamed amid palm trees and ferns on the edge of a dying inland sea. One day a mature male T. rex, weighing up to five tons and measuring nearly 40 feet in length, died in a silty washout. At least two albertosaurs, sharp-toothed scavengers about half T. rex's size, fed on the carcass, leaving a few of their teeth behind. Within months a river overflowed its banks and swept the bones away...
After his discovery, Sacrison called Peter Larson, the president of the Black Hills Institute of Geological Research, in Hill City, South Dakota. Larson is a controversial figure in the world of paleontology: last year, after he announced that he was excavating the largest and most complete Tyrannosaurus rex ever found, the U.S. Attorney impounded the skeleton, contending that it had been illegally removed from government-owned land. Larson disagrees, and the institute is suing. But there is no dispute over Sacrison's latest find, which Larson named Duffy, in honor of his lawyer. After getting the landowner's permission, Sacrison...