Word: fold
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...buffoonery designed to make you laugh. Not content with infiltrating 21 of the 24 pages in this first issue, the cartoonists have also taken to the printed word in a story or two. Feiffer runs on the back cover, Zooey on the front; and everyone runs on the center-fold in a delightful illustrated game called "The Riots of Spring" which everyone's got to play. Delightful. Even the advertisements are delightful. And to keep you coming for more, the saga of "Don Juan in Nebraska" will be continued in the next issue. And the one after...
Directors David S. Cole '63 and David Sloss '61-4 explained that they had completed casting several weeks ago, but that a number of key people quit, for a variety of reasons. "Their unreliability has a lot to do with our decision to fold," Cole said...
...another with alarming, confusing facility. For example; we watch M playing cards while we hear X tell A of the afternoon last year when they met on the hotel terrace and discussed a near-by statue of a man and woman in classic dress. X describes every gesture, every fold of the toga. Meanwhile, the cardgame goes on before our eyes. For a moment we hear the players' voices, and one of them makes a remark which logically precedes X's first statement in the flashback that follows immediately. In this sequence, X and A continue their discussion...
...Fallout radiation intensity decreases exponentially, Kistiakowsky asserted, "the factor being a ten-fold decrease for every seven-fold increase in time...
...cast (notably Anne Baxter and Jane Fonda) positively seethe with vitality. The script, which owes almost nothing but its title and its setting to the novel by Nelson (The Man with the Golden Arm) Algren, was written by five writers in succession, and it reads like a round-robin, fold-over-and-add-a-line letter: "You certainly are an unusual girl to find in this sort of place . . . Darling, I love enough for two . . . My father used to say that love comes on silent feet . . . It's all so foolish, all so unreal." And that...