Word: bone
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...Nixon set off on his no-stop campaign trip, gave state and local G.O.P. leaders the spark they needed. By last week, with Ike jumping into the campaign to assert his own brand of party leadership (see Republicans), Republican spirits were on the rise. At week's end, bone weary, with voice choked by a cold, Nixon hailed "the shot in the arm" that Ike had given Republicans. Said Nixon: "Today I can confidently say that as we enter the last critical week it is a brand-new campaign...
...fusing Greek story with modern one, its exalting "versification at the expense of plot and character." And all too often The Family Reunion seems remote just where it should be intense, seems to be abstraction without even the vividness of allegory. Bloodless, it fails to cut quite to the bone; it is only those inwardly dead in the play who ever seem outwardly alive...
Munro has no less than four injured forwards on his hands: John Mudd, a regular inside who has a fractured bone in his leg, Dick MacIntosh, the regular outside right who also has a bad leg, and Kay Khan and Ken Marmor, who may see some action. Munro will start Roger Tuckerman at center forward, Keith Lowe and John Hedreen at the insides, and Larry Ekpebu and McIntosh at outsides. Fortunately, this is not an Ivy League game, and the Crimson can use all their substitutes rather than abiding by the 16-man rule. Tom Bagnoli, who is developing into...
...Governor Lindsay Almond, highly skilled lawyer and vote-getting politician, the conflict between republican law and regional politics as dictated by prejudice comes to bear in a microcosm. Almond is a true son of the Virginia that gave to the U.S. eight Presidents, including Washington, Jefferson and Madison, the bone, blood and brain of the republic. He is equally a son of the Virginia that gave to the Confederacy its crimson fields, its grey-clad men, and above all its leaders, who should have known better...
James is the Dean of the Anatomical School of Literature--the Neo-Sophistry which views poetry and prose as a connected skeleton. The curriculum is not particularly concerned with what the skeleton has to say, what it thinks about, or, indeed, if it's starving to death. It's bone-structure, marrow, and stomach-muscle, the physiology of literature...