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Usage:

...three seniors who won the award are Lawrence Berger '70, Thomas Cross '70, and Les?ie F. Griffin...

Author: By Richard E. Hyland, | Title: 1000 Attend Class Day; The War is Major Theme | 6/11/1970 | See Source »

...dominating figure in the play is Bessie Berger (Joan Lorring), an abrasively dislikable Momma Portnoy. Her ineffectual husband Myron (Salem Ludwig) sums up a lifetime of quiet desperation when he tells his son, "Don't think life's easy with Momma." Like many another line in the play, it lingers in the air with Chekhovian sadness, like a note struck on an unseen piano. Even though Myron is U.S.-born, he is a prototype of the immigrant father who was held in contempt if he failed economically, and derided as a philistine if he succeeded, often...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theater: Life at the Boiling Point | 6/8/1970 | See Source »

...John W. Birch, director of Aviation at Logan, walkel to the TWA ticket counter and began speaking over a megaphone. When demonstrators started coughing so that he could notbe heard, he handed the megaphone to Robert T. Berger of the State Police...

Author: By Jeremy S. Bluhm, | Title: Peaceful Earth Day Ends With Conflict at Airport | 4/23/1970 | See Source »

...Berger read a written warning, ordering the demonstrators to disperse. He said that the demonstrators were participants in an unlawful assembly and were subject to immediate arrest...

Author: By Jeremy S. Bluhm, | Title: Peaceful Earth Day Ends With Conflict at Airport | 4/23/1970 | See Source »

...conventional theatrical limitations become meaningless. A black actor with a giant Afro wig swings across the theatre on a Tarzan swing, and other members of the cast climb almost to the balcony in the sets constructed out along the theatre's walls. The audience is uptight when loin- clothed Berger first climbs out into its lap, panhandling for a dime; but the illusion of spectator distance begins to fade with the progress of the play. The audience comes to realize that the onstage performance is only a segment of the Hair experience, and the evening's real drama lies...

Author: By David Sellinger, | Title: HAIR: | 2/14/1970 | See Source »

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