Word: bowe
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...order choice will weaken the fabric of the artistic community considerable. He says that under the new system, he would not have been able to do many things he once did at Adams, where he organized a house reading series called "Night People," and learned to use the Bow and Arrow Press. Before partial randomization, Kevin says, Adams House was "a more vital place. It makes sense that Seamus [Heaney] is in Adams House. It wouldn't make any sense for him to be in Kirkland. And it's no accident that Master Kiely was in the English Department. There...
JOHN H. IBIS '92 was sighted last week pursuing various Harvard administrators around the Yard. Citing irreconcilable differences, Ibis said he fled his perch at a putative Bow St. Social club which periodically publishes parodies. Apparently, Ibis his been AWOL for several weeks, and some sources say he was seen at Yale Commencement ceremonies prior to the resignation of Yale resident Benno Schmidt...
Wilson says his only bow to that establishmentcame when he successfully sought membership inEliot House. Wilson had arranged to live with twostudents from distinguished families. Duringinterviews with then-Master Roger B. Meriman, theother two students went in first. Meriman askedeach about his family, then welcomed them to EliotHouse...
Here the Porter treasures range from the composer's tart, crisply enunciated delivery of Anything Goes to Gertrude Lawrence's lascivious rendition of The Physician. Some choices bow, gratifyingly, to the obvious. Ethel Merman trumpets Blow, Gabriel, Blow; Fred Astaire croons Night and Day; and Mary Martin purrs her way through My Heart Belongs to Daddy. But more interesting are the unexpected matches and offbeat finds. Marion Harris, a now forgotten star, strikes a provocative balance of plaintive charm and rhythmic sophistication in a 1930 recording of You Do Something to Me. For Miss Otis Regrets, Ethel Waters' well-known...
...BOW TO THE WEST, RUSSIA DECIDED TO MAKE its ruble convertible to foreign currencies for the first time in nearly seven decades. The goal is to free the price of the ruble to float, possibly as early as Aug. 1, though most experts say the process could take longer. Moscow is counting on the measure to attract foreign investors who will then be able to calculate real prices and costs. They will also be able to take profits -- if they make any -- out of the country...