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Word: chapman (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
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Usage:

...someone was to comment so aptly in The Crimson the next day, with the first speaker, in a white suit and reading something you couldn't understand from Virginia Woolf, forgetting the part about half way through and just kind of sweating it out until the end when Mr. Chapman--that's Mr. Robert Chapman, who ran the contest--says real politely as if nothing happened, Your time is up. You could tell the guy would fuck up when he started by asking Mr. Chapman who the judges were, as if it was a military tribunal. There I am laughing...

Author: By Philip Weiss, | Title: Big Game | 4/20/1976 | See Source »

...third varsity boat will not make the trip to Columbia today but will face a Coast Guard crew on the Charles this morning. Varsity J.V. 3V Stroke Reynolds Cunningham King 7 Howard Pickering Chapman 6 Welch Kuschner Behrman 5 Heller Brooks Calkins 4 Yates Potter Fuches 3 Kiger Crocker Miller 2 Parker Lowry Kubicek Bow Leahey Quigley Rubin Coxswain Levitch Howe Cordeiro

Author: By Richard J. Doherty, | Title: Harvard, Radcliffe Armada Takes to High Seas | 4/17/1976 | See Source »

...Robert Chapman's stately production of Mary Stuart succeeds handsomely in conveying the queen's dual tragedy, thanks to outstanding performances by Sarah Jane Lithgow and Laura Bartell in the leading roles. Stalking about her jail cell, villifying her jailers and judges with regal outrage, Lithgow's Mary Stuart dominates the first half of the play, outclassing every male actor in the show. Her controlled brilliance is more than matched, however, by Bartell's flamboyant portrayal of her English counterpart. Harsh, demanding, sometimes petty in her violent jealousies, Bartell's Elizabeth presents a clear dramatic contrast to Lithgow's more...

Author: By Julia M. Klein, | Title: Mary and Elizabeth: More Stately Monarchs | 3/25/1976 | See Source »

Mary Stuart is a static, talky play, and Chapman has done little to disturb its stateliness. Keeping the pace slow, he instead relies on the dramatic excitement generated by his two leads to give the play momentum. It's a strategy that works well when the queens are soliloquizing or confronting each other, but inevitably breaks down when the men take over...

Author: By Julia M. Klein, | Title: Mary and Elizabeth: More Stately Monarchs | 3/25/1976 | See Source »

...Clayton Chapman, assistant to the commissioner of the ECAC, spelled out the rules regarding Bolduc's eligibility. What it amounts to is that if any student-athlete plays knowingly with a group of professionals, whether or not he is being paid, he is ineligible to play that sport in college...

Author: By William Scheft, | Title: Bolduc Impresses Whalers in Tryout | 3/23/1976 | See Source »

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