Word: sadly
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...sad part is that West’s rhetoric may leave a lasting blot on Harvard’s image. Harvard may have given rise to epochal black scholars like W.E.B. DuBois, but it has had to struggle for decades with its reputation as a lily-white pedestal for the privileged. One of the few great accomplishments of former Harvard President Neil L. Rudenstine’s tenure was his dogged emphasis on diversity, which succeeded in erasing much of the stain of that history and making the university a genuinely welcoming place for black students. Ironically, the highest-profile...
...from edge to edge, free of dust and precisely in focus. "Nobody, including us, ever sees it that good again," says Soderbergh, the Oscar-winning director of Traffic and Erin Brockovich. "Even after that first screening, it's got dirt on it and scratches." It's one of the sad facts of life for anyone who loves movies: film wears out and runs at the mercy of projectors with weak lamps and worn gears...
Brown added, “This project for Arts First is awesome, but it is sad that public student art is relegated to this one short week. It’s a great celebration, but it’s a little like Valentine’s Day. Shouldn’t art be displayed and appreciated every day of the year...
...understand the brilliant depth of Guest’s performance, one only needs to watch his face as he observes the Lucy of Beatrice E. Kitzinger ’03. Having lost her family in the war, she speaks only to strangers, obliviously repeating sad invitation. Kitzinger, turning in a fine performance of her own, communicates to a familiar face only after her delusions are spelled out for her; she comments, “We get some pretty crazy people in here, eh?” Throughout the skillfully staged sequence, it is difficult to pay attention to anyone...
...reached the gate of Quincy House, the point of our departure and the point of our sad return...