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James Lapine, the celebrated director and playwright, conducted a directing workshop on February 18 in Adams House sponsored by the Office of the Arts' Learning from Performers Program...

Author: By Carolyn B. Rendell, | Title: In Conversation With Author James Lapine | 2/25/1993 | See Source »

...critiqued scenes from last semester's HRDC production of Into The Woods and from this semester's Loeb Experimental production of The Yellow Wallpaper. The following are excerpts from his discussion with The Harvard Crimson and workshop participants...

Author: By Carolyn B. Rendell, | Title: In Conversation With Author James Lapine | 2/25/1993 | See Source »

Still, the very notion of having high-megaton missiles at the ready, either on Earth or in orbit, was unsettling to many at the workshop, who feared that they could be turned against fellow humans rather than cosmic interlopers. They simply "did not want to talk about very large amounts of energy," says Canavan. "And therefore they wanted to ignore the problem." Some suggested heatedly, in leaks to the press, that pro-nuclear Star Wars scientists, frustrated by the down-sizing of their projects, were using the asteroid and comet threat as an excuse for revitalizing their jobs...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Look Out! | 2/1/1993 | See Source »

...attacking a large comet or stony asteroid, however, the interceptors would have to take care not to blast their quarry into many large chunks, each of which would be a potential city killer. One way of avoiding that, workshop scientists suggested, is to use the neutron bomb, a weapon that delivers most of its energy in the form of speeding neutrons rather than an explosive blast. The neutron warhead would be detonated when the missile approached to about a distance equal to the radius of the asteroid. "The neutrons penetrate deeply into the near side of the asteroid," Canavan explains...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Look Out! | 2/1/1993 | See Source »

Antinuclear, anti-Star Wars scientists were not reassured. Some campaigned through last summer against even the mention of any nuclear deterrence in the final draft of the interception workshop's report. Then came word of Comet Swift-Tuttle. "Nothing so clears the mind as the sight of the gallows," quips Canavan, who oversaw the final report. "Even though Swift-Tuttle turned out to be a false alarm," he says, "it brought everyone's thinking into focus. There was no longer the kind of disagreement you saw earlier about nukes versus non-nukes." Compromises were made, and the long-delayed interception...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Look Out! | 2/1/1993 | See Source »

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