Word: final
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...actors never were able to regain their composure on stage and laughed through their lines for the last ten minutes of the play. At the end. a speech by an old man saying, "it's a bad night to set fire to this place" left the audience laughing. A final improvised line starting, "I don't smoke; I only start fires." ended the play on a much more comic note than if it had continued normally...
...Cadets came to their feet during the final event as the freestyle relay team finished on top of the Crimson, but then manager Glenn Koocher announced that the last Army man had jumped, disqualifying the Cadets. In a show of brashness. Harvard fans cheered...
Leslie P. Griffin 70, president of Afro, said that the agreement is not final. "We just felt it wouldn't be to our advantage to stay until they called in the cops." Griffin also said that the demonstrators did not discuss whether to demand amnesty for their action. "The consensus was that sometimes you have to take responsibility for what you do." he said...
Unfortunately, in the final seene, "American Meadows," Lindsay Crouse seems to have forgotten that words can be limiting. The three-part dance is accompanied by the narration of Blake's poem "Song of Liberty." By itself the poem is extremely complex; combined with the complexity of Cherries Ivies music, and of the choreography which mixes mime with dance, the poem becomes virtually incoherent to anyone who hasn't studied it extensively beforehand. More important, the intellectual effort which the poem demands detracts from our response to the dance-it leaves us fragmented. This is a sad irony, because Blacke...
...last time Army swam in the IAB. the outcome was particularly disappointing for Harvard. The Cadets were ahead by six points with only the freestyle relay left, so the winner of the event would win the meet. The Crimson's Bill Shrout lost by a foot on the final leg, enabling Army to extend its streak. It row numbers six consecutive victories...