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Finally, senior Tri-Captain Fred Sherrer was out of the line-up and in stitches--the kind incurred from a flying elbow...

Author: By Alvar J. Mattei, | Title: Aquadudes Drown B.C.; Head to 'Pot Final, 14-7 | 10/14/1987 | See Source »

Harvard has been plagued by a rash of injuries, including Co-Captain Paul Palandjian's sprained ankle, Hank Parichabutr's bad elbow, and Leschly's sore shoulder...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Netmen Finish 4th at ECACs | 10/13/1987 | See Source »

Zurbaran's version comes right from the rhetorical heart of the Counter- Reformation. Dark, admonitory and raw, it seems overwhelmingly real in every detail, from the coarse weave of the woolen habit (with a frayed hole at the elbow, emblematic of poverty, brilliantly accentuated with a few impasto flicks of white light on the dangling threads to give a hint of contrast to * the massive carving of the rest of the forms) to the shrouded face whose eyes Zurbaran loses in blackness to suggest the hermetic nature of the saint's vision. His gaping mouth is doubled in the gaping...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: From The Dark Heart Of Spain | 10/5/1987 | See Source »

...minimizing of entry red tape reveals that you are expected and welcome to this land of gorgeous adventure and the limber elbow," notes the 1938 Blue Guide to Cuba in summoning Americans to the nearby island. Nowadays, of course, the situation is different. For more than two decades, Cuba has been virtually off limits to U.S. citizens. Recently, however, TIME Contributor Pico Iyer was able to spend roughly three weeks as a tourist on Fidel Castro's island on two separate trips. His impressions...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cuba Whispers Behind the Slogans | 9/21/1987 | See Source »

...manner of Hess's death stirred shock and suspicion. An obvious suicide risk, Hess had tried to kill himself on at least four occasions, including a 1977 attempt in which he used a blunt dinner knife to gouge his wrists, foot and elbow. His son, Wolf Rudiger Hess, 49, a Munich civil engineer, complained about "too many mysterious circumstances" surrounding his father's death, while Alfred Seidl, the old man's lawyer, argued that it would have been physically impossible for Hess, frail and nearly blind, to have throttled himself. The suicide was a particular embarrassment to the U.S., which...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Rudolf Hess: 1894-1987: The Inmate of Spandau's Last Wish | 8/31/1987 | See Source »

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