Word: framed
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...links historical Vienna to the Vienna of Shakespeare. The opening scene, set in a house of ill repute, resembles a giant sewer. We are down low, beneath ponderous vaults, looking into endless black caverns. But those same vaults function as the huge window frames in Angelo looks, the heavy frame vaults serve as a reminder of the seamy underside he struggles to repress...
...Soviets registered their first public reaction to the defection by claiming that Shevchenko was being held in the U.S. "under duress." Echoing a Tass dispatch from Moscow, the Soviet Mission to the U.N. issued a statement calling the defector a victim of "premeditated provocation" and of a "detestable frame-up" by American intelligence agents...
...early deficits seemed too strange, almost too imposing for a comeback frame of mind by the Crimson batsmen. Harvard managed only five hits in each game, and outside of Santos-Buch, Mike Stenhouse and Mark Bingham, the last half of the order came up with only one safety on the day, that a pinch-hit double by Peter Bannish in the sixth inning of the first game...
...first frame, Santos-Buch beat out a bunt to the left of the mound, took second on a passed ball, moved to third on an infield hit by Mike Stenhouse and scored when Mark Bingham lofted a sacrifice fly to left...
...eight pieces on the Dance Company program--all choreographed by Harvard students or affiliates--three seemed to be less dance pieces than theatrical pieces about dancing. Elizabeth Lurie's "A Touch of Folly," for example, used the stage as a frame for the whimsical meanderings of a quantity of balloons dropped from above, tossed from the wings, or (almost incidentally) blown up and carried by dancers. At least the equivalence was consistent: dancers sprawled on the floor next to balloons with the air let out, balloons ascended and dancers rose on tiptoe, balloons bobbed and floated while dancers circled...