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Football: King Jon!

Powered by senior running back Jonathan Grimes’ record-setting day and opportunistic defensive play, William and Mary bounced back from its shutout loss last week to score a commanding 24-10 win over CAA-rival New Hampshire at home, moving the Tribe (4-3, 2-2 CAA) back into the thick of the playoff hunt with four games left.

Grimes’ 169 rushing yards on 28 carries made him the College’s all-time leading rusher, while his 323 all-purpose yards were just one short of the school’s single-game record — his as well — and his two long touchdown catches made the difference in the game.

“We bounced back and got some turnovers and we just got the running game going really well,” head coach Jimmye Laycock said. “I couldn’t be happier for our players. Last week was disappointing but hey, this week, it’s great.”

Senior defensive end Marcus Hyde set some records of his own, leading the way for a defense whose four takeaways were the key to holding the Wildcats (4-2, 2-1 CAA) to just 10 points despite their 517 yards of total offense. Hyde set the school single-game sacks record before halftime, finishing with five sacks and nine tackles, consistently dominating New Hampshire lineman Walter McCarthy.

“I watched last year’s film,” Hyde said. “I know some of the moves that I do best work great against him. The secondary did a great job covering back there, they gave me a little more time than I needed. I just rushed him all day, I just wanted it more than that kid I guess.”

Junior linebacker Jabrel Mines logged a team-high 13 tackles, forcing and recovering a fumble in the first quarter.

Early on, it looked like the offensive struggles would continue for the College (the team entered averaging just 12.3 points per game). Sophomore quarterback Brent Caprio became the third quarterback to make a start for the Tribe this year with sophomore quarterback Mike Graham sidelined due to illness.

Grimes ran well from the beginning, but with the offense marching down the field on its first possession Caprio threw an interception at the New Hampshire 10. The Wildcats returned the favor, though, when Mines knocked the ball loose from running back Dontra Peters at the Tribe’s 27 yard line and made the recovery.
But Caprio couldn’t lead the offense on another long drive, and the first quarter closed with the game scoreless.

The Wildcats would threaten at the start of the second, as quarterback Kevin Decker moved the ball through the air and on the ground to the College’s 22. But a Hyde sack stopped the drive when New Hampshire tried to convert on fourth down.

Caprio would fumble on the ensuing possession, though, setting the Wildcats up on their own 41. The defense held, and after the teams traded punts a flurry of scoring came at the end of the half.

With two minutes, 30 seconds remaining in the quarter, Wildcat kicker Mike MacArthur hit a 37 yard field goal to break the tie, capping off an 11-play, 60-yard drive.

Grimes would answer right back, though. On the second play of the next drive, Caprio checked to the half back near the sideline. Grimes spun through tackles, somehow keeping his balance along the sideline, and broke out, winning a foot race to the endzone for a 72-yard touchdown catch.

“I was actually thinking about running out of bounds because it was two minutes,” Grimes said. “I was going to stop the clock, but somehow I stayed up and kept it going.”

The Wildcats got the ball back on their own 10 with just 1:35 left in the half, which turned out to be more than enough time for Decker and company to move down the field. The senior diced up the Tribe’s secondary, needing just seven plays before finding wideout R.J. Harris, who leapt over senior safety Jake O’Connor in the corner of the endzone, made the catch and barely kept his feet in bounds for the 15-yard touchdown catch to put the Wildcats up 10-7 going into halftime. Decker finished the game at 34 of 50 for 422 yards, a touchdown and two picks. He also ran the ball 17 times for 80 yards.

The lead would change hands again early in the third. Working at midfield on the Tribe’s first third quarter drive, Grimes caught a screen pass near the right hash. With blockers and lots of daylight in front of him, Grimes darted across the field and went 50 yards virtually untouched for his second touchdown reception, putting the College back on top, 14-10 after the extra point. The senior would finish the game with three catches for 126 yards.

“He just made the plays,” Laycock said of Grimes. “He’s been a step away from a play here, a step away from a play there, and then, son of a gun, he made some plays. A couple of times they thought he was down and he kept it going with effort. Jon plays like that every snap. Every snap of every game, every snap of practice.”

Two New Hampshire possessions later, the Wildcats were on the move with a first down at the Tribe 32. But freshman safety Ivan Tagoe stepped in front of a Decker pass at the 18 yard line, making his first career interception and keeping the score at 14-10 going into the fourth.

“For us defensively, even though they got some yards, for us to hold a team like that to 10 points, that’s a heck of an effort right there,” Laycock said.

On the College’s next possession it was Grimes’s backup, freshman running back Keith McBride, who made it a two-score game, taking a hand-off from Caprio and using his blocks to break free for a 50-yard touchdown run, putting the Tribe up 21-10.

After sophomore safety Jerome Couplin intercepted another Decker pass, sophomore kicker Drake Kuhn provided the final score with a 45-yard field goal.

But with the game in the bag, the drama persisted. Grimes was rapidly approaching the College’s career rushing record. Entering Saturday’s game, the senior needed 145 yards to become the school’s all-time rushing leader. On the last drive of the game, Grimes took sole possession on a 3-yard run on first down, passing Derek Fitzgerald ’96.

“It’s definitely a great achievement,” Grimes said. “That win was really huge for the school, for this season. And with the record coming today, it just put the icing on the cake. It was just a great day for William and Mary.”

Like any good back, the senior gave due credit to his offensive line.

“Those guys in front definitely motivate me, all day every day,” Grimes said. “They’ve got a lot of confidence in me, and I’ve got a lot of confidence in them, and all this wouldn’t be possible without starting from the linemen from freshman year.”

Grimes finished the game with 3,744 career rushing yards.

“Each week, I try to see what [Grimes] does well,” McBride said. “I try to mimic him and just try to get better each day. Jon’s somebody I definitely look up to.”

The win propels the College back into the playoff chase. The Wildcats entered the game in a three-way tie for first place, ranked sixth in the nation.

“This is great,” Hyde said. “All the guys know, we got together last night and we talked about it. I didn’t want my season to be done after [the Tribe’s final regular season game at] Richmond. I want to go to the playoffs. We have to win. Fight or die.”

With four conference games remaining, the Tribe will stay at home next week to face first-place Towson.

Football: W&M/New Hampshire Live Blog

College Republicans appear on Glenn Beck show

Uncertain economic times are eliciting responses in the form of varied perspectives and views that often clash. Whatever their opinions, members of the Tribe are raising their voices.

While students headed home for fall break, two members of the College Republicans, James Joseph ’14 and Lisa Iverson ’12, attended and participated on Glenn Beck’s radio show at his studio in New York.

“Glenn Beck is out front in the conservative movement, and we are not going to agree on everything, but we would do it again,” Iverson said. “We were very pleased for the invitation.”

Prior to break, the College Republicans received an email from the Glenn Beck radio show inviting anyone who was interested to be part of the audience.

“I know Glenn Beck has had College Republicans on his show before, but I’m not 100 percent sure why the College Republicans were invited on the show,” Iverson said.

Beck argued that while the Tea Party movement has been accused of being violent, the Occupy Wall Street movement was more likely to cause violence down the line.

“[Occupy Wall Street protestors] are marching on wealthy people’s homes today. Is that not an intimidation tactic, at least?” Beck’s co-host Pat Gray said on the show. “When did the Tea Party ever march through anyone’s home?”

The discussion focused on instances when chaotic events spark revolutions, referring directly to some of the tactics of the Occupy Wall Street protestors.

Beck talked about the nature of revolutions, and opened the topic to audience members. Joseph, treasurer of the College Republicans, gave his input.

“A strong political leader comes to power and centralizes control,” Joseph responded.

Joseph also brought up examples of strong political leaders coming out of chaotic times in Germany and Russia.

Lack of concern as grades rise

Some things haven’t changed since 1693. At the College of William and Mary, the distinction between earning grades and receiving them has always been clear, and while grade inflation is a concern in much of the academic world, most students and faculty don’t see it as much of an issue at the College.

“At some points I’ve personally felt grade inflation, but I feel less of it here at William and Mary,” Asha Williams ’12 said.

Grade inflation, according to history professor Cindy Hahamovitch, is the practice of “giving students high grades, not because they merit them, but to avoid conflict or disappointment.” According to a recent study by former Duke University professor Stuart Rojstaczer and Furman University professor Christopher Healy, the phenomenon has been on the rise since the 1960s.

In 1960, approximately 15 percent of grades awarded at universities were A’s; in 2008, A’s accounted for 43 percent of grades given. For the 1991-1992 academic year, the average GPA at all universities was 2.93; for 2006-2007, the average was 3.11.

The phenomenon seems to be more prevalent at private schools, where almost half of the grades awarded in 2007 were A’s. The percentage of A’s was around 40 percent at public schools in the same year.

At the College, grade distribution percentages have remained consistent for the past five years, but cumulative GPA records indicate that students have slightly higher grades now than they did a few years ago.

The average undergraduate cumulative GPA in fall 2005 was 3.20, whereas the average in fall 2009 was 3.25.

In comparison, the average cumulative GPA in spring 2008 at the University of Virginia was 3.22, while the average cumulative GPA in fall 2008 at the College was 3.25.

Despite these creeping numbers, students and professors do not seem to have felt the effects of grade inflation at the College. One reason for this may be the culture of hard work on campus.

“We have a student body full of high achievers who are determined to have a good GPA, and they work for it,” Taylor Gaukel ’14 said.

Professor Marylou Zapf, who has taught at the College for a decade, believes the quality of students has always been high and is even on the rise. Fewer students ask about extra credit, and more students are interested in gaining knowledge, she said.

Student satisfaction with grading at the College may stem in part from the fact that most professors do not limit the number of students who can earn a high grade.

“If they all do well, they all do well, and vice-versa,” history professor Jody Allen said. “I give them a clear direction to what I’m looking for, and I’m looking for how well they complete the assignment.”
Professors’ approachability and accessibility may also be contributing factors.

“If they mark something down as wrong, and I talk to them about why I think it isn’t wrong, they’re willing to understand my reasoning,” Brittany Strimple ’13 said.

Encouraging students to treat their classes as learning opportunities rather than just GPA-boosters may decrease the pressure they feel to get straight A’s and the pressure professors feel to award them.

“Everything is geared toward passing exams, and it shouldn’t be that way,” chemistry professor Carey Bagdassarian said. “Students here learn how to think and play intellectually.”

Rather than identifying the school as suffering from grade inflation, students expressed satisfaction with the level of difficulty of their classes.

“I like this system because it makes it a bit more challenging to get the grade we really want while giving us a little net by making it harder to get a grade we don’t want,” Humzah Nasir ’14 said.

Graduate salary rankings high

Graduate school is competitive, the job market is scarce and salaries are less than ideal, but according to a ranking by PayScale.com, all those long nights are paying off. The College of William and Mary is now ranked ninth in Payscale’s Top State Universities By Salary list.

The College beat out other institutions from around the state; Virginia Tech ranked at 17, the University of Virginia at 25 and George Mason University at 30. According to the rankings, which are based on data collected from alumni who complete a PayScale survey, the starting median salary for College alumni is $45,000, and mid-career salary is $96,500. For Virginia Tech, the numbers are $51,600 and $92,500, for U.Va., $49,500 and $90,300, and GMU, $48,800 and $88,600.

Additionally, the study found that graduates from the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) earned the highest salaries compared to all other subdivisions of the NCAA Football Bowl and ranked first for both average starting salaries and mid-career salaries. A number of factors may contribute to this success, such as the efforts of the Sherman and Gloria H. Cohen Career Center.

“The Cohen Career Center provides services and resources to build competence, confidence and the ability to manage lifelong career development,” Assistant Director Holly Meyer said.

The Alumni Association also provides a number of services to help graduates in the job market.

“William and Mary alumni are a proud and active community,” Brooke Harrison, alumni programs director, said. “The Alumni Association helps bridge the gap between academic and professional development and real-world mentorship with tools and networks to succeed, not the least of which are alumni chapters and city guides.”

Alumni Association Board of Directors President Peter Nance attributed the graduates’ success to the quality of education they received at the College and the school’s reputation.

“Having worked for a company that employed a number of William and Mary graduates, I think that William and Mary has really earned the reputation of graduating students who communicate and think logically about outcomes,” Nance said. “And I think that’s a direct outcome of our liberal arts education. The ranking is also a reflection of those who have come before, those who have graduated, by their performance [they’ve] really created a legacy that gives new graduates a head start, so I think that’s something really to celebrate.”
Nance also considered the bigger picture.

“Salary Potential Ranking is perhaps one measure of success,” he said. “I think that what we’ve really learned at the College is that grades aren’t the only thing; it’s really the totality of that you’ve done at the school.”
According to Harrison, the combined efforts of these groups successfully serve alumni.

“Connecting the breadth and wealth of alumni experience both to each other and to students is an essential partnership between academic programs, students, alumni, the Career Center and the Alumni Association,” she said.

Conference commends the College

The College of William and Mary made its mark at the annual Conference for the Advancement of Sustainability in Higher Education Oct. 9–12.

Chosen to represent the College at this national event, Max Cunningham ’13, Sarah Hanke MMP ’10 and Lauren Edmonds ’11 attempted to show how far the College has come in its efforts to become an innovative and successful green school.

The Committee on Sustainability, formed in the fall of 2008, is responsible for navigating the College into a sustainable and eco-friendly place.

“The conference went very well,” Cunningham said in an email. “My presentation on a school-specific carbon offset program was well-received and led to a lively discussion of what it means to offset and how the current model of offsetting might be changing.”

The on-campus Carbon Offset program, started by Cunningham and former professor John Swaddle, was nominated for an AASHE award.

“The idea is that the opportunity exists to improve the energy efficiency of infrastructure on campus but that the funding to do so might not be immediately available (with all of the talk regarding financial difficulty, this should not be hard to imagine),” Cunningham said. “In my mind, offsetting on the college level does two basic things. First, it has a direct effect on the funding available to improve energy efficiency. This should be fairly obvious. I think the second benefit is that it raises awareness of sustainability issues and how sustainability might work moving into the 21st century.”

This program seeks to reduce greenhouse gas emissions wherever possible on campus and has proved to significantly reduce emissions, putting the College on the sustainability map as one of the first institutions of higher learning to focus on such an issue.

“Offsetting doesn’t necessarily change anything in dramatic fashion,” Cunningham said. “It works by individuals contributing to improving the efficiency of a system already in place. If individuals can actually participate in that process in a meaningful way, perhaps those individuals will start to see more clearly how they fit into the broader picture of sustainability.”

Hanke serves as a Sustainability Fellow for the College. She discussed the William and Mary Dining Services Sustainability Intern Program and the rapid progress the College has made with the program.

“[The Dining Services Sustainability Intern Program] helped Dining Services get a lot of sustainability related projects done in just three years,” Hanke said in an email. “I talked about our composting program, going trayless, the herb garden, the reusable to-go containers, and the cryovac machine and what role the interns played in each of those initiatives.”

Hanke stressed the importance of sustainable features of College Dining Services because of its indispensability to campus life.

“Dining Services becoming more sustainable is really important to the campus as a whole,” Hanke said. “Many students have a meal plan, so sustainability initiatives in Dining Services reach a wide audience. Dining Services also has the potential to impact our local economy by purchasing more food from local farmers, a goal we are working towards.”

The cost-effectiveness and leadership opportunities of the dining intern program were two features Hanke praised.

“Sometimes being sustainable costs more than business as usual, so being innovative can help to accomplish goals without spending a ton of money,” Hanke said. “Students are also great at being innovative and creative, and I think that’s part of what makes our intern program work so well. Besides the energy savings, I think the biggest benefit is the chance to educate students and give them leadership opportunities in sustainability related fields.”

Edmonds also presented her thesis at the conference, entitled “An Evaluation of Effective Structures for Campus Sustainability Programs at Institutions of Higher Education,” which she wrote while she was a College student.

“The conference was a great learning experience,” Hanke said in an email. “W&M was well-represented and we also learned a lot from other schools.”

City gives students awards for service

When a student body collectively volunteers a total of 333,453 hours in one academic year, people start to notice. This commitment to service was recently recognized by the Greater Williamsburg Chamber and Tourism Alliance, which honored the College of William and Mary student body as the “corporate citizen of the year.”

“I think that a lot of the time students who do a lot of service on campus don’t get thanked enough,” Student Assembly President Kaveh Sadeghian ’12, who accepted the award on behalf of the student body, said. “You guys are the ones doing the service out there, and, in the spirit of William and Mary, it’s often rooted in humility.”

To celebrate the award, the SA held a reception and award ceremony for the leaders of the various service organizations honored by it.

“Every now and then, something happens that is so perfect, simply perfect, that it’s inspiring,” College President Taylor Reveley said. “And I think this is one of those occasions.”

Kevin Walsh, vice chairman of the alliance board, presented the award and praised student efforts in partnering with more than 120 local organizations and schools and in branching out both nationally and internationally. He noted that the College was ranked as the top university in the country for community service and volunteerism by Washington Monthly magazine.

The event’s keynote speaker was George Srour ’05, founder and editor-in-chief of the College’s DoG Street Journal and founder and “chief dreamer” of Building Tomorrow. The organization, which he started in an unused room in his parents’s house after graduation, has sent more than 1,500 kids to school in Uganda and was named a top up-and-coming social change organization by Echoing Green magazine. Srour was the first person to receive the James Monroe Prize for Civic Leadership from the College, and was named one of the top 100 most powerful people in Indiana by Indianapolis Monthly magazine.

Srour described himself as a typical College student who has a difficult time saying no when presented with an opportunity and as the type of person to argue with any alumnus that he had a better time while at the College. Srour said the three most important things he learned while at the College were humility, community and the ability to dream.

“When I got here, I realized that all the people who made up my freshman hall and who made up my classes and who made up all the organizations I was involved with were all awesome,” Srour said. “And I learned that humility was key. I can’t tell you how many things that I applied to when I was on this campus that I got denied to do.”

Srour said he has kept the rejection letters as a source of inspiration, but in looking back at his time at the College, he focuses on what he was able to do. He claimed, that it was the supportive community that allowed him to dream big and to start the DoG Street Journal.

“This was an incredible place to start it,” Srour said.

In offering some words of wisdom, Srour not only told students to make the most of their time at the College, but also also to not take themselves too seriously.

“This is a really awesome place, but don’t take yourself too seriously,” he said. “A lot of what I learned and a lot of what I continue to use today are the experiences that happened outside of the classroom.”

Reveley praised both Srour and the student leaders for continuing the College’s long tradition of community service.

“This is a perfect award for our students,” Reveley said. “And it’s a nifty looking award.”

Fake grenade causes police station evacuation

A woman carrying a fake grenade in her pocket entered the Williamsburg City Police station Friday morning and deposited it on the desk, causing the building to be evacuated and the U.S. Department of Defense to be called to the scene.

The woman, who has a military background, picked up what she thought was a deformed, unexploded, military-issue grenade off of a street close to the intersection of Matoaka Court and Richmond Rd.

“At 9:50 a.m. this morning, a civilian arrived at the Williamsburg Police Station with an item she believed might be an unexploded ordnance device,” Williamsburg Communication Specialist Kate Hoving said in a press release.

A Yorktown Naval Weapons Station team was dispatched to the police station once the Department of Defense was notified by the Williamsburg Fire Department of the incident.

The device was determined to be a cigarette lighter shaped to look like a grenade.

“If I had picked it up and held it like the individual, I might have ascertained that it was a novelty device, but I didn’t actually handle the device,” Williamsburg Fire Chief William Dent said in response to criticisms that the cigarette lighter was not initially detected. “No one from the police station or the fire department handled the device. The woman walked into the police station with it in her pocket and set it down on the desk.”

The Yorktown Special Weapons Team was called instead of the Police Bomb Squad because the grenade was suspected to be military-issue.

“So, once the Williamsburg Police Department was concerned about it, we decided to err on the side of caution,” Dent said. “If we were 100 percent sure it wasn’t a device, we wouldn’t have evacuated.”

Dent added that it is common for people to tamper with devices, even cigarette lighters.

“We take the necessary precautions to protect the public, and a lot of people are looking up on the internet saying they could tell it wasn’t a real grenade, but it’s not always that simplified,” Dent said.

This is the first incident of its kind that Dent has experienced in the city.

“Our message is to everyone, whether they have military experience or not, just leave it and let us respond to that scene. We have had people transport actual devices in their vehicles, and fortunately none have exploded, but, you know, we don’t want that happening,” Dent said.

The Williamsburg Police Department declined to comment on the situation.

Robbery link investigated

The Williamsburg City Police Department is investigating a possible link between two robberies after a juvenile was arrested and charged with the robbery of a bookbag Sept. 30. The incident was similar to the incident involving a College of William and Mary student held at knifepoint near the Governor’s Inn Oct. 2.

The Sept. 30 robbery, which took place four days prior to the Governor’s Inn robbery but was never reported, came to the attention of the Williamsburg Police during their investigation of the Governor’s Inn knifepoint robbery.

“A person came forward about another person being robbed, and then we found the [stolen] property, which we traced back to the victim, who told us of the robbery,” Williamsburg Police Major Greg Riley said.

Like the second robbery, the first involved a stolen backpack, this time at 1:15 a.m. on the 1200 block of Richmond Rd. near the Bloom grocery store. However, the Sept. 30 robbery involved a single victim and a single perpetrator, while the Oct. 2 crime involved four male perpetrators.

“I know the investigator is looking into possible linkages between the two robberies, but at this point in time, I am not comfortable saying that the two robberies were linked,” Riley said.

Williamsburg Police obtained a warrant Wednesday for the arrest of a juvenile male suspected of robbery. He was taken into custody Thursday and arrested Friday.

Both the victim and the perpetrator were estimated to be of collegiate age. The descriptions and identities of the perpetrators cannot be released due to their ages.

“We are not positive if the perpetrator was a William and Mary student; he was that age,” Riley said.
The victims of neither robbery were reported harmed.

Shaping up near perfection

Whichever Top 40 single you may hear upon entering the Studio Theatre in Phi Beta Kappa Memorial Hall this weekend, chances are the song and the presumably rational choice to play it will prompt an eye roll. It certainly didn’t precipitate good will even from me, and I’m inclined to give whatever I enter a theater to see at least a fighting chance. But the music, featuring the aural diversity of Train’s soulful, anguished bleating to 3 Doors Down’s dissonant, anguished bleating, is something of a trick. It’s not merely a way of establishing time and place—that’s a task simple enough to divine purely by paying attention. The nauseatingly boring melodic catalogue is, like the production it inhabits, a means of constructing reality as a lecture, a museum piece where the audience is part of the exhibit.

Oh, and there was a play somewhere in there, too.

I’m referring to Neil LaBute’s Big Message about Important Things, or as it’s more commonly known, “The Shape of Things,” which premiered last night as part of the theatre department’s Second Season. This piece has always seemed a bit lackluster compared to his other works —“Fat Pig” and “Reasons to be Pretty” plays which uncompromisingly rail against the aesthetic values of modern society with fiercely sharp dialogue and righteous anger, which is bounced between characters and theatergoers to make effective, if transparent, polemics. “The Shape of Things” takes a different tack, presenting characters who appear affectionate until the denouement, but its language was too halting and contrived. The jokes rarely hit home, and the action never really seemed to be a logical progression from the characterization, largely because the male lead, Adam — played by Jamie Ellis ’13 —isn’t written to have the major personality change that is needed to make LaBute’s argument ring true.

But in this heart-wrenching interpretation, directed by theatre professor Christopher Owens, such problems are no longer a concern. Instead of placing the growing relationship between Adam and Evelyn (get it?) in a recognizable reality — as LaBute himself did in the forgettable 2003 film adaptation—the entire performance is reduced to that of a PowerPoint presentation, and becomes a realm in which people can be archetypal with no repercussions. What, it doesn’t seem like the two of them would be together? That Adam’s friend Phillip — a serviceable Tyler DeCourt ’13 playing a serviceable role — wouldn’t bother seeing his roommate after they became “former” roommates? That Phillip’s fiancee Jenny — Maren Hunsberger ’15, doing her best — is window dressing until the plot demands her to be otherwise? Well, in this space, naturalism is a thing of the past. You’re sitting in on a seminar, not watching real people interact! There’s no reason to hew to some vague idea of what makes sense, and in this form, the play’s admonitions become quite worthwhile. I’ll leave the complications of improving a play which both despises the constructed aesthetic through aesthetic constructions for someone else to parse.

One consequence of this minimalist vision for “The Shape of Things” is that the actors can be the caricatures LaBute has laid out, yet the portrayals in Owens’s adaptation are far from simplistic avatars for ideology or alteration. Ellis, an actor who proved able to break out of the Woody Allen mode in 2009’s “Bones,” here makes slighter changes to his personality, keeping the hesitant, halting speech but downplaying it as time goes on. It’s worth watching his portrayal in this production since he never really crosses the threshold of likable and unlikable and witnessing his breakdown is undeniably painful. As Evelyn, the sly manipulator of Adam’s looks and lifestyle, Zoe Speas ’12 is captivatingly seductive. Impossible as it is to give the proper credit to her performance without revealing key plot details, suffice it to say that Speas makes it evident that Evelyn’s passions lie outside of her personal life: an argument about the proper meaning of radical artistic expression evokes more fury and zeal than the tenderest moments between her and Adam. Their chemistry is almost sickeningly sweet, though, and that’s as it should be — the more sympathetic the romance, the more shocking it is when the rug is pulled out from underneath it.

I’ll be honest, my own biases against the play are going to work against any production of “The Shape of Things” I’m called to review. But thanks to the ingenuity of this staging, I’ve been won over. There are a few times when the show doesn’t provide evidence for what LaBute is trying to say and falls victim to the inconsistencies that plague the script itself. But who would I be to ask for perfection?

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