Word: bartonized
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...remaining Dennis Lynch grabbed a rebound off his own backboard and hooked it in to give the Crimson a nine point lead, 49-40. Three points by the Big Green's Wilson Madden, who made seven of eight shots from the floor, and a tap-in by center Sam Barton cut the Crimson lead to four, 49-45. Then Scully went to work...
...Barton took the shot, a drive from the pivot position, and the score was tied 53-53. Scully, however, hit two more fouls and Harvard led again. Then came the key play. Steve Spahn of Dartmouth missed a short jump, Scully wrestled the ball free, dribbled down court, and whipped in a jump shot from the foul line. Gene Augustine's two free throws offset Coker's jump in the waning seconds...
...look at a king; so I suppose that one must concede to Mr. John Barton the right to concoct an evening of 35 monarchal snippets from 1000 years of English history (he calls them "an entertainment by and about the Kings and Queens of England,...men and women like you and me.") Fortunately, the maxim does not require us (you and me, that is to say) to look at Mr. Barton and his fellows as they debase the monarchs to make them palatable to a democratic audience by smirking, giggling, and vulgarly overacting...
Died. Roy Sarles Durstine Sr., 75, for 34 years the "D" in B.B.D. & O., one of advertising's biggest agencies; of a heart attack; in Manhattan. Durstine started as a publicity man for Teddy Roosevelt's Bull Moose party, in 1918 helped found Barton, Durstine & Osborn, later Batten, Barton, Durstine & Osborn. He pioneered agency-arranged radio programs and helped land U.S. Steel's first advertising account; though he resigned in 1939 to form his own agency, B.B.D. & O. has retained his initial ever since...
MADISON Avenue's favorite phrasemaker is Charles Hendrickson Brower, 60, the shambling, 6-ft. 4-in. president of Batten, Barton, Durstine & Osborne, which had 1961 billings of $248 million and is the U.S.'s fourth largest agency. A onetime English teacher who describes his forebears as "New Jersey peasants for generations," Brower made his name at B.B.D. & O. as a copywriter with an infinite capacity for hard work. Propelled unexpectedly into the presidency in 1957, he was promptly hit with the loss of the $7,000,000 Revlon account. His reaction: "I'll just...