Word: traps
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...magic in Bill's words. It's easy to talk yourself numb about the complexities of coaching in the professional era. And sure, at the top of any sport there's a lot of stuff coaches must get their head around. But the complexity can also be a trap...
...designer Eric P.C. Phelan ’07, successfully evokes the surroundings that could trap these women and also, at the same time, allows enough space for the actors to be constant in action, breathing life into the play’s dialogue-propelled plot. The direction also stages the action to subtly imply its context of the character’s social conditions; a privileged Desdemona constantly lounges while the household-supporting wife Emilia toils away and Bianca freely enters and exits as a woman of her own will and self-defined pleasure...
...University games. After giving up 86 and 92 points to the Terriers (1-5) over the past two seasons, Sullivan focused on defense, throwing some relatively new zone looks at BU. Sullivan implemented an extended 3-2 zone to engage the Terriers’ perimeter shooters and added a trap underneath to force quick decisions from the BU interior players. The Terriers came out hot on a 14-5 run and continued to shoot well throughout the half, knocking down 62 percent of their attempts from the field. But the Harvard zone forced eight BU turnovers in the opening...
...Washington was looking for a change in her life, determined to avoid the common domestic trap among Aborigines known as 'Granny Burnout.' "My husband always worked," she says. "And I'd like to try it as well. I've finally found some independence, away from the family and grandchildren. I wonder whether any of the things I've learnt in this course will be of use. Who would want to employ me?" Employment coordinator Natalie Tighe says mature women are seen as a safe bet by employers - they aren't going to have more children, are settled and have...
...David G. Grier ’84 at New York University and Hyman Professor of Chemistry Charles M. Lieber at Harvard, among others, found a way to cut, rotate, and fuse hundreds of nanowires in precise patterns. Agarwal’s discovery uses a mechanism called the Holographic Optical Trap, or HOT, invented by Grier’s group in 1997. According to Grier, a HOT “use[s] forces exerted by light to grab and move microscopic objects.” The HOT technology improves on previous methods to arrange nanowires by stochastic methods—like...