Word: bobbed
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Rick Pearce--back in the line-up at third base--and hot hitters Burke St. John and Bobby Kelley bunched singles for another run in the fourth. Pearce and St. John ganged up on Eagle starter Bob Meara again in the sixth, tying up the game when Pearce rapped a two-run double and St. John followed by powdering a full-count fastball for a home run to left-center...
...Tommy Can You Hear Me/Smash the Mirro." She precisely evokes a bizarre combination of tender motherly concern and guilt-inspired anger. And as an extra bonus, Woo develops her character without overacting in the moments when she is not singing: a job the other actors find difficult to do. Bob Cunningham, as Nora's lover/accomplice Frank, sings adequately. Once away from the mike however, he presents either exaggerated venom or a sense of being out of place. Lowell McKelvey, as the young Tommy, is supposed to look like an ingenuous child. Sure enough, he looks like one. He even speaks...
...that Allen has forgotten about laughs. While in the thick of making Manhattan, he spent dozens of hours watching Bob Hope movies to compile a one-hour film tribute for a Lincoln Center gala honoring the comedian. "I had more pleasure looking at Hope's films than making any film I've ever made," Allen says. "I think he's just a great, huge talent. Part of what I like about him is that flippant, Californian, obsessed-with-golf striding through life. His not caring about the serious side at all. That's very seductive to me. I would feel...
Eliot describes the ever deepening frustration Ochs endured as his songs and his career failed to reach the minds of his contemporaries. It all began, though, in 1962 in the Greenwich village folk clubs, which then featured singers like Peter Yarrow, Dave Van Ronk, and Bob Dylan. It was a time when "anyone with a pocketful of tunes, a guitar, and the guts to get up on stage was singing folk music." Ochs started out with songs like "One More Parade and "The Power and the Glory...
Juniors Boota deButts and Bob Thomas dodged for three goals each to lead all Princeton scorers. Thomas scored the game-winner at 6:54 of the fourth quarter, slipping past Harvard defenseman Frank Prezioso. After Harvard's Mike Faught made it 10-9, Princeton's Peter Matthews iced the win by cutting past Matt...