Word: silentes
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...experience. The term could also apply to the entire film. After “Sylvia,” Guerín screened “Unas fotos en la ciudad de Sylvia,” a succession of black-and-white still photographs and text reminiscent of silent films from the twenties. The photographs represent Guerín’s observations of women in an urban setting and offer different points of view on Guerín’s vision of a city and its female inhabitants. Guerín’s other feature films...
...Timberlake, flat on the ice, wraps his legs around a Harvard player's and doesn't let go, holding on for a good three or four seconds and eventually pulling him down. According to the referees, that does not fall under the definition of "tripping," as the whistles remained silent...
...long ago, my blockmate’s father asked me a seemingly simple question over dinner: why am I a Democrat? I momentarily—and awkwardly—fell silent, knowing that “I guess I agree with most of their policies” would be an insufficient response, particularly after he had just explained his faith-based conversion to the Right. There I was, unable to find a larger and more compelling reason for choosing my defining political affiliation...
...given the night before the South Carolina primary. The setting was a historic spot, Penn Center on St. Helena Island, a complex of rude buildings that had served as a center for the civil rights movement, dating back to the Civil War. The crowd, however, was overwhelmingly white - a silent reproach to Clinton by his best-loved constituency, those unutterably decent, hardworking, middle-class, churchified African Americans. They had been shocked and hurt, and then enraged, by his foolish, two-week effort to diss Barack Obama. The next crowd, at Hillary Clinton's closing rally in Columbia, was equally pale...
...given the night before the South Carolina primary. The setting was a historic spot, Penn Center on St. Helena Island, a complex of rude buildings that had served as a center for the civil rights movement, dating back to the Civil War. The crowd, however, was overwhelmingly white-a silent reproach to Clinton by his best-loved constituency, those unutterably decent, hardworking, middle-class, churchified African Americans. They had been shocked and hurt, and then enraged, by his foolish, two-week effort to diss Barack Obama. The next crowd, at Hillary Clinton's closing rally in Columbia, was equally pale...