Word: garlanded
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...Garland said recent acts of vandalism in Eliot House are probably not related to Monday's break...
...Logan (H) 30:47; 10. T. Datri (BC) 30:49; 11. T. Bullines (BU) 30:53; 12. N. Scidmore (H( -?:57; 13. J. Lowton (Br) 31:01; 14. J. Kelly (BU) 31:02; 15. J. Doane (NU) 31:08; 16. G. Patriaca (Br) 31:09; 17. R. Garland (Br) 31:21; 18. T. Horton (BC) 31:23; 19. E. Schuler (H) 31:33; 20. J. Danysh (Br) 31:40; 21. E. Connor (Br) 31:46; 22. Kerwin (MIT) 31:53; 23. J. Warua (BC) 31:57; 24. B. Levinson (BU) 32:04; 25. P. Bickford...
...look at that minority of tormented adolescents whose members grow up to write novels about the pain of puberty, not the joy. Films of the traditional sort did not risk truthtelling, largely because of the hoodoo of sex. What they gave us was Mickey Rooney and Judy Garland sipping one soda through two straws. The suggestion that Judy wore a bra, and that Mickey might have wanted to unhook it, would have been so unthinkable that to mention it, even now, seems boorish...
...took a fair amount of brass and something like genius to transcend these limitations. Judy Garland in Wizard of Oz and Mickey Rooney in Boys' Town did it by the sheer force of their gift. But to ward the close of World War II, styles changed...
DIED. Jack Haley, 79, jovial Boston-born stage and screen comedian best remembered as the Tin Woodman, Judy Garland's fellow pilgrim on the yellow brick road in the 1939 MGM film classic The Wizard of Oz; of a heart attack; in Los Angeles. Haley parlayed his blue-eyed Irish good looks, comic flair ("Trouble is my best material") and talent for song and dance routines into a lucrative career that allowed him to all but retire after World War II as a millionaire real estate investor. Last appearance: in Norwood, a 1970 movie directed by his son Jack...