Word: displayed
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Pressing the attack from the opening whistle, the Crimson rebounded from last week's disappointing showing at Columbia. Bombarding Cornell's goalie with an awesome shooting display, Harvard missed many scoring opportunities in the opening period...
...taken to jobs; "There are jobs-just look in the Sunday Chicago Tribune" Ron agrees. "That's where I always used to look." The Hoppes want Negroes to have a good life if they are willing to work for it. They do not believe that most blacks display that willingness. "I think we should look into the Negro problem with the Communists," says Sally. "They're being used. Why should we elect a soft President and play into the Communists' hands?" For the Hoppes, "Communism" is an all-pervasive evil threatening every aspect of their lives...
...strong display of depth, the Yardlings captured five of the top six spots. Seals, who broke the freshman course record at Brown last Saturday, completed the two-and-a-half mile distance in the time of 11:34. The freshmen usually run three miles, but Andover only competes at the shorter distance...
...artists took to proclaiming that anything is art if the artist says it is, critics have been wondering where the brush would strike next. The instrument they had to fear was the shovel. In Manhattan's Dwan Gallery, the newest frontier is called "Earthworks," and the ingredients on display include dirt, worms, rocks, photographs and written descriptions. "Our original idea," explains the gallery's earth mother, Virginia Dwan, "was just to show earth as a medium, but it's difficult to know where to draw the line...
...current exhibition's answer: Both. Throughout his career, Kline turned out both superb and atrocious works, and the 92 pictures on display include rather more than a fair share of failures. Paradoxically, the uneven quality may even enhance Kline's reputation. Few artists could hope to survive such a warts-and-all survey. Yet undeniably the powerful radicalism of the mustachioed Pennsylvanian comes across-though sometimes as crude as corn whisky, and sometimes as bombastic as soapbox oratory...