Word: bowle
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Crimson lightweights captured their sixth straight Biglin Bowl on the Charles Saturday, but they needed a furious stretch surge to hold off the M.I.T. eight they had beaten soundly two weeks ago. The Crimson has now captured the Biglin Bowl in every race but one since its inauguration in 1955, losing the triangular competition only to M.I.T. in the first race held...
...winter, 'Cliffies play basketball, volley ball, and badminton in the gymnasium and occasionally bowl in tournaments at the Harvard Bowlaway. In the spring, it's back outside for softball, lacrosse, sailing, and archery in the Quad. One dorm representative noted that the program even includes bridge and ping pong--"to keep them alive...
...determined woman who once ran the 220-yd. dash on her high school girls' track team, Mrs. Chandler believes that "our only hope for survival lies in women and in education and cultural exchanges.'' Her notable contributions to culture have been the saving of the Hollywood Bowl through a vigorous fund-raising campaign in 1951 and the launching of the new music center. Her detractors accuse her of ignoring better-informed musical opinion than her own and of alienating, before Solti, such talented musicians as Eduard van Beinum and Alfred Wallenstein...
...Bowl of Cherries (Kingsley-lnterna-tional). "The big city!" gasps yet another young Picasso from Pocatello as he stares in gaping amazement at Manhattan's skyline. "I've made it at last!" With his "life's savings" clutched in one hand and his life's work in the other, the young painter-hero of this 24-minute short subject plunges with the valor of ignorance into the talent warren known as Greenwich Village. He rents himself a studio in an alley littered with garbage and decorated with a sign that says: NO TOILET. Then...
...charming, witty piece of intellectual slapstick, a two-reel silent spoof of modern painting that is just as funny as Day of the Painter (TIME, Sept. 12) but much more subtle in comment and adroit in technique. The work of a 27-year-old New Yorker named William Kronick, Bowl was filmed at 16 frames a second and is shown at 24, with an arresting result: the picture moves across the screen, as the old silent comedies did, with a tic-quick impetuous energy and innocence that delightfully heighten...