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...providing a violent death. That's an odd exclamation point to a Bennett sentence that should end in ellipsis. It's as if he was afraid his students in the audience were too dull to get the point. Bennett can be forgiven the polemic, for he has brought to brilliant life a dozen original characters: four adults (including Frances de la Tour as a teacher who says history is simply "centuries of male ineptitude" and "women behind them, with a bucket") and the eight boys, each smartly defined, each bright, each needy or greedy. On stage, the evening belongs...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: One For The Books | 5/30/2004 | See Source »

...gets at larger ideas, like humans becoming slaves to their machines, while also supplying plenty of outrageous gore and freaky jolts. Fans of the films of David Cronenberg, such as "The Fly" and "Rabid," with their themes of bodily corruption, will see his influence on Ito's work. His brilliant drawings only become more outrageous as the story goes on, searing your brain with fantastically detailed moments of gut-puking carnage and nightmarish surreality. At one point Tadashi encounters a circus taken over by the germ that keeps going about its business - a seeping, rotting parody of its once jubilant...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Fish Tales | 5/28/2004 | See Source »

...national championship was the centerpiece of a brilliant year for Radcliffe, which went 10-1 in dual races and captured an Eastern Sprints championship...

Author: By J. PATRICK Coyne, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Radcliffe Heavies Head West To Defend NCAA Title | 5/26/2004 | See Source »

...paradigm on this subject equates crowds with mindless mobs (the bigger the mob, the dumber and more dangerous)--think of lemmings or the Gadarene swine that Jesus sent off the cliff. The old paradigm, no doubt elitist and authoritarian, cherishes the brilliant individual (Leonardo da Vinci or Isaac Newton, who reinvented the universe while hiding from the plague in a country house...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Triumph of the Masses | 5/24/2004 | See Source »

...course, practically no one was listening. It was like Nero offering a brilliant water-and-sewage plan for Rome in the midst of the fire. The Bush Iraq policy lay shattered in tiny pieces; the President seemed crestfallen in his public appearances. Indeed, Kerry's message discipline--broken by occasional, measured responses to reporters' questions about the war--almost seemed a clever way to avoid the issue. His audiences waited in vain for a passionate response to the Iraq debacle...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Iraq Is Not Just Bush's Problem | 5/24/2004 | See Source »

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