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...Cambridge and Latin High School JV team is not a typical team. And Fanshen Cox, the squad's third-string wide receiver, is not a typical player...

Author: By Michael J. Lartigue, | Title: Learning to Play With the Boys | 11/7/1986 | See Source »

...Seabrook ("C-Dass" as the cognoscenti call it) is vehement about shutting the plant down through direct action--by cutting down the fence, getting inside, and occupying the construction site so work will have to cease. One of the most prepared groups in the effort, the cryptically-named Fanshen Armadilloes, occupies center stage for a time Saturday afternoon. Earlier that morning, while photographers clicked wildly, the Fanshen crew practiced cutting fences while pretend policemen battered their shields with branches. Now it's the real thing--in a drainage ditch next to the main gate, while 400 curious picketers watch...

Author: By William E. Mckibben, | Title: Seabrook: The Vegetable Garden War | 5/27/1980 | See Source »

Like last year's Little Flag Cooperative's production of "Fanshen," "Emma" is theater with an unmistakeable political message. Battling against the twin injustices of sexual discrimination and economic inequality, Zinn's Emma Goldman is both a social activist and humanist in her diverse roles as union organizer, lecturer, social worker and midwife...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Emma Comes Alive | 10/13/1977 | See Source »

Tania, Maxine Klein's musical work about Tamara Bunke, who fought and died with Che Guevara in Bolivia, is playing in repertory with Fanshen at the Little Flags Theater Collective, Boston Center for the Arts, 551 Tremont St., Boston. Tania plays Thursday at 8 p.m. and Saturday at 10 p.m; Fanshen plays Friday at 8 p.m. and Saturday...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Stage listings for the week | 10/28/1976 | See Source »

...debates within Peking's small foreign community. Their narrative is interwoven with description of the events in their own microcosm of China's students, giving the book the sense of being a traveller's tale as well as a well-researched academic work. Like William Hinton's Fanshen, The Wind has an impact a straight history could not have achieved; but even the Miltons seem bewildered by many aspects of the Cultural Revolution, as if they, too, could not quite fathom the allegory and thetoric in which the debates were couched...

Author: By Gay Seidman, | Title: A Great Disorder Under Heaven | 8/10/1976 | See Source »

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