Word: franticness
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...frantic phone call reveals that Dixon is right--a quarterback named Bateson with the physical characteristics of Bateman had starred for UTEP...
...unerring sense of comic misunderstanding, Charon was a standout onstage. One awed critic, reviewing his performance as Sganarelle in Moliere's Don Juan, observed that he could command a scene even when he was "simply standing onstage and watching." As a director, he could bring off the most frantic Feydeau farce with clockwork-perfect timing, achieving maximum impact...
Last season was by far the most exciting Harvard has had since 1968. The Crimson snatched a share of the Ivy title with Yale by defeating an unbeaten, united Bulldog squad with a last ditch drive in the final frantic minutes to clinch a co-companionship. The win left Harvard with a 7-2 record for the year...
...also is as near a fact as anything can be that any President or candidate is going to insist on some public appearances as long as this nation is not a police state. But we can make some changes. Presidential travel and campaigns have become huge and frantic spectacles. The size of the crowds at airports and along motorcade routes has become a bogus measure of political popularity...
...performance. Riding atop their huge Niva combines, Soviet farmers last week were rushing to harvest the grain crop, and from the Ukraine to Siberia, extra trucks were being pressed into service to speed the wheat, corn, rye and barley to storage areas before fall rains cause spoilage. Despite the frantic efforts, the Soviet harvest is expected to fall at least 25 to 30 million tons short of this year's goal of 215 million tons-forcing the U.S.S.R. into foreign purchases that are jarring world markets and causing political turmoil in the U.S. (see THE NATION...