Word: freaked
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...Crimson jumped out to a quick and convincing 6-1 lead in the first period. Bob Muse scored his second goal of the season at 1:15 unassisted. Thirty-five seconds later, Princeton tied it up on a freak goal poked in the net by Doug Elliott who was trying to clear the puck following a great save by Joe Bertagna. The score was given to Walt Snickenberger...
...freak of nature is a baroque opera with a dramatically engrossing plot. Such is the case with Montezuma, whose book was by Frederick the Great of Prussia. The music is reputed to be quite up to the above-average standards of the plot, as well. With extensive pruning, the Associate Artists Opera are presenting a rare experience...
...Crimson started the opening period looking much the same as they did against B.U. and Vermont. Penn jumped out to a 2-0 lead on goals by Gordon Halliday and Peter Leef. Halliday's tally at 4:47 came on a freak deflection off his stick as he and Bob Muse were jamming in front...
...whose thoughts on The Crimson we have already read, in making the last half of the decade the brightest period to date. News flowed in from the hard working editors and the hard-worked candidates. In November 1928, a light plane narrowly missed exterminating the Harvard Band in a freak crash on Soldiers' Field, and The Crimson duly reported the affair. One of the plane's two passengers, Gordon Cairnie, has been The Crimson's next door neighbor for many years, as proprietor of the Grolier Book Shop. When reminded of the event, and The Crimson coverage a few weeks...
OSWALD SPENGLER ONCE SAID that a sure sign of the decline of the West would be its increasing preoccupation with religiosity rather than religion. Today, with pop monstrosities like Jesus Christ Superstar on Broadway, Jesus freaks on the cover of Life, and cheap return tickets to Zen Satori available only Saturday night, we seem to be substituting an elaborate facade of images and facile spiritualism for any real commitments to spiritual growth. Our culture seems to be providing more and more channels for what Dietrich Bonhoeffer called "cheap grace," personal fulfillment, or the illusion of it, with no trial...