Word: grinds
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That happy circumstance has befallen Slab Boys, a burst of bitter memory from Scottish Playwright John Byrne about the hopeless nights and dreamless days of young men who grind dyes in the "slab room" of a carpet factory near Glasgow. When first produced in New York, off-Broadway in 1980, the play seemed a programmatic denunciation of the social order, as personified by two pompous functionaries and by a blazered young prig who was passing through the slab room on his foreordained...
...MAYORAL elections are going to be turning-points for both cities. The last two major big city machines may grind to a half, leaving Daley, Byrne, and White in-the-history books next to Boss Tweed of New York's Tammany Hall...
...final score was almost the only satisfying aspect of the contest for Harvard. From the start, the game was played the way Northeastern likes is--bump-and--grind hockey, chocked with lots of bodychecks (and a few cheap shots). In one of the ECAC's smallest rinks, the Crimson never succeeded in playing the fast-skating game it thrives...
...violent--but apparently unconnected--images that flash before our eyes. Is it by government or men that human misery will be cured? As the film ends, it seems that even the most masterful of politicians, a man like Sukarno, is a failure. Weir has no particular ideological axe to grind, but seems to be implying--and one can never be sure about this irritatingly obtuse work--that governments are impotent in the face of the most elemental, human problems. It doesn't make for much Hollywood excitement, but if Peter Weir is right, then The Year of Living Dangerously...
...broadly defined program of training for post-college life. When this instinct chains a person to a library desk, it is regrettable. But having recognized its dangers and spurned some of its more distasteful products. I firmly believe that, on balance. I have benefited from the Harvard grind...