Word: adriane
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...while it appeared that they would. After Boland scored again at 4:02 of the final period to push the Blues ahead, Paul beat Toronto goalie Adrian Watson 29 seconds later to bring Harvard even. But then, slowly but gradually, the tide began to turn...
...general, however, what Food Columnist Adrian Bailey called the meal that built an empire appears to have declined along with Britain's dominion over palm and pine. Where to go, then, for a memorable breakfast? To the U.S., suggests Ronay, who seems to have been impressed not so much by the quality of American food as by the efficiency of room service. "Such rapidity!" he exclaims. "You hang that thing on the door and breakfast does arrive on time." Just where in the U.S. that remarkable experience occurred Ronay, unfortunately, does not specify...
...practice in the London suburb of Epsom and launched his musical quest in earnest. The Royal Academy and the Royal College of Music both rejected him as too old to enroll in conducting courses, so he practiced with amateur orchestras around London. When he approached Sir Adrian Boult, the doyen of British conductors, Boult offered to become his patient if he would stick to medicine. Instead, Bialoguski took a master class in conducting with Franco Ferrara in Siena, Italy. Eventually, Boult let Bialoguski rehearse the New Philharmonia in Beethoven's Prometheus overture. He did so well that the orchestra...
...guess is that Adrian Henri also spends much of his time reading transit ads. He may derive poetic insight from the habit, but what he has written down as poetry reads only like a backwards bus poster...
...other works of art seem to be multiplying like guppies. Though these works sometimes look like literal copies, they are usually sly, even malicious comments about the nature of art and its relation to reality. John Clem Clarke's stylized version of Frans Hals' "St. Adrian Militia Company," which hangs in a downtown Manhattan bar (above, with artist seated second from the left), is surrounded by a white line so that the staid, 17th century Dutchmen appear to be figures on a television screen. Clarke thus suggests that TV's ubiquitous eye has changed everybody...