Word: fountaining
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...Deerfield, Mass. 19 Kevin Mohan ADJ Milford, Mass. 20 Chuck Shirey SE Waterloo, Iowa 21 Dean Givas FB Sacramento, Calif. 21 Tim Manges WB Fort Wayne, Ind. 22 Mike Madden WB Pleasanton, Calif. 23 Tom McMillin SE Glendale, Calif. 24 Lee Oldenburg CB Acton, Mass. 25 Joel Seay SE Fountain Valley, Calif. 26 Al Fletcher DB Waterford, Conn. 27 Brian Bergstrom CB Swedesburg, Iowa 28 Paul Arnett K Atlanta, Ga. 28 Bill Hyland FS Foxboro, Mass. 29 Joe Connolly SE Selbyville, Del 30 Brian Cooke FB Hingnam, Mass 31 Rufus Jones HB Memphis, Tenn 32 Jim Lowe WB Springfield...
...sound and whirling energy cannot hide the show's vacuity. The story line is repetitive and inconsequential; Trevor Nunn's staging is an elephantine parody of his wondrous work on Nicholas Nickleby and Lloyd Webber's Cats; and the composer, who until now seemed an inexhaustible fountain of inventive melody, has devised a bluesy score that is sere and predictable. Lloyd Webber is no longer content simply to write musicals; now he must mount spectacles for theatergoers who will accept something big in place of something good. The performers, led by Stephanie Lawrence and a break-dancing...
Drawing on my "expertise" acquired at my uncle's drugstore I quickly got a job at Liggett's North Station store--behind the soda fountain. It was a 56-hour week on rotating shifts for $15 a week. Not bad especially when you consider that females were paid $12 for the same gruelling schedule...
...with big bands and hot jazz. There are marching bands and washboard scratchers, as well as beer hall oom-pah-pah and big-name oomph. Concert performers will run the scale from Willie Nelson and Linda Ronstadt to Itzhak Perlman and Isaac Stern. Naturally, Al Hirt and Pete Fountain will also drop by to blow a few notes on behalf of the local talent...
...simple plot is enhanced by the colorful and symbolic figures that influence Hobbs' quest. There is his grumpy yet loveable coach, Pop Fisher (Wilford Brimley), whom the audience first encounters in the Knights' dugout patiently watching his clumsy ball players and screaming about the rusty water from the water fountain. Pop Fisher needs a break, and when Robert Redford saunters into the pit, reminiscent of Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, the audience feels a thrill of excitement at the predictable future of the Knights...