Word: julia
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...reunion fi lled with sexual tensions,old connections, and a merging ofpast and present that blurs the edges of thecharacters’ realities. But the three-personplay, which runs through this Saturday,becomes even more intimate after onelooks at the playbill and realizes that thethree actors—Julia L. Renaud ’09, ReneeL. Pastel ’09 and Daniel R. Pecci ’09—arealso the play’s three directors. The trio allwanted to direct and act but realized thelogistical diffi culties in doing both in oneseason. After reading and being...
...When Julia E. Schlozman ’09 visited Germany with an informally organized History of Art and Architecture (HAA) seminar last summer, she expected to discuss the artistic merits of cathedrals—not of masturbating monkeys.But when the students encountered a relief carving of just such a primate in a small Catholic cathedral in Germany, a conversation on the formal qualities of the carved lewd simian ensued. “We had to have an academic discussion about it, which was so awkward,” Schlozman says.Awkward or not, the trip and discussion highlight the way that...
...risks, and exploring career options outside of campus recruitment. At the event’s conclusion, many students gathered around the speakers for informal chats and seemed to respond positively to the panel’s message. “The discussion was very inspiring,” said Julia M. Anoshechkina ’10. “This sort of event gives me the courage and the support to pursue what I really love.” Other students said they appreciated the speakers’ specific suggestions and “practical insights...
...most beautiful is what is still unfinished / a sky filled with stars uncharted by astronomers / a sketch by Leonardo a song broken off from emotion / A pencil a brush suspended in the air”So Julia Hartwig’s “In Praise of the Unfinished” concludes, leaving her readers suspended in their own emotions. And yet this momentary captivity is liberating: while emotionally entangled, we achieve intellectual freedom by virtue of the poems. We continue on in our incomplete lives armed with the completing questions. Even at 85, Hartwig still discovers new mysteries...
While H Bomb received praise—Julia T. Havard ’11 said that it was “artistic expression” with “a message behind it”—some of those present feared that Diamond would be less like H Bomb and more like mainstream pornography...