Word: shadows
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Insipid, tepid and vigorously lacking in originality, the Pucker Gallery's current exhibit of pastels by Mallory Lake, Italy Light and Shadow, is a fuzzy romantic nightmare, Hallmark style. These lifeless, flat and relentlessly maudlin landscapes do the impossible: resurrect the bourgeois landscape of the 19th century without even the slightest hint of irony. Such unremitting cuteness might just as well have been the result of Snuggles the detergent teddy bear's experimentation with a paint-by-numbers kit while on vacation in Tuscany. To Lake's credit, several of her horizontal compositions are unusually strong in their geometric structure...
...Jonas' chance to emerge from Prestifilippo's long shadow and Mazzoleni said that he will give him every chance to succeed...
...reflects Gilmore about the series of color photos she took of her younger brother, Tom, who is shown sitting sleepily at the kitchen table in a rumpled, faded blue oxford shirt. The coloring isn't vibrant, but its restrained subtlety, combined with the appealing use of subdued sunlight and shadow, makes the picture pleasing. "I think that awkwardness tends to work well. He was just in the kitchen, and the light was gorgeous, so I went and got my camera," recalls Gilmore...
...fact that UHS chose to release the survey statistics--albeit in their preliminary form--to peer educator groups before the rest of the student body cast an unfortunate shadow over the results. While it is understandable that the statistics could be useful for these groups' work on campus, there is no reason to provide neutral statistics to some students before others. The fact that Peer Relations and Date Rape Relations (PRDRE) was asked not to use the statistics in its presentations to students before their official release eliminates any advantage gained in providing them to the group in advance...
...husband, country and life of financial security in Karachi for the modest two-bedroom apartment in Chicago that she shares with her sons. "I couldn't take it anymore," she says. "My close friends would say, 'The mad boy is coming' and hide their children so that his shadow would not come to their children." To appease her relatives, she dragged Umair to religious sites and forced him to drink "holy water." She fears that as Umair gets older, he will be taken to a pagal khana (mad house) where, she says, he would spend his days in a cage...