Word: gustafson
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...Kudlacik (C) 31.87; 3. Kelley (H) 32.35. 5$-yd. breaststroke--1. Joel (H) 33.14; 2. Droppo (C) 33.81; 3. Poirier (C) 34.90. 100-yd. butterfly--1. Black (C) 1:04.47; 2. McAree (H) 1:06.36; Fortin (C) 1:06.58. One-meter diving--1. Stone(H); 2. Gustafson (C); 3. Vinson...
...Black (C) 1:06.84; 3. Sochanchak (C) 1:08.10. 200-yd. freestyle--1. Tobiason (C) 2:03.92; 2. Joel (H) 2:03.92; 3. Adams (H) 2:11.08. 50-yd. butterfly--1. Droppo (C) 29.45; 2. Fortin (C) 29.51; 3. McAree (H) 31.29. Three-meter diving--1. Stone (H); 2. Gustafson (C). 100-yd. breaststroke--1. Joel (H) no times; 2. Poirier (C); 3. Thompson (C). 200-yd. freestyle relay--1. UConn (Toblason, Dropo, Sochanchak, Langenahn) 1:45.97; 2. Harvard 1:48.60; 3. Harvard (no time). Ivy League Basketball Ivy All Penn 3-0 11-3 Brown...
That conclusion was reached after hundreds of depressed patients had been interviewed by a computer programmed by Psychiatrist John Greist and David Gustafson, professor of preventive medicine. In 72 of the cases, the computer predictions were compared with those made by therapists in traditional face-to-face interviews. The computer correctly identified the three patients who attempted suicide within 48 hours after their interviews. The therapists failed to predict any of the three attempts. One patient was about to be released when the computer determined that he had a gun, bullets and a precise suicide plan. In long-range predictions...
Sharing the limelight with Seltzer is Nancy Gustafson as Patience, the pure-hearted, affectation-hating country girl. Clad in a yellow and white dirndle, Gustafson acts the part with a winsome wholesomeness and devotion to duty. Her scenes with Archibald, particularly when she alternately begs him to "think of me sometimes" and warns him to "think of me sometimes" and warns him to "advance at your peril," are especially fine. But Gustafson's talents are most in evidence when she launches into song. Her strong, pure soprano elevates Patience's plight to operatic heights, her superb diction rarely obscuring Gilbert...
AFTER SELTZER and Gustafson, encomiums are harder to parcel out. Linda Greenbaum, as the Lady Ella, has an unusually winning voice, and Stephen Montgomery as the extremely eligible Duke of Dunstable sings in a rich, clear tenor. As Major Murgatroyd, David Brown stumbles out of step, mugs and affects a Cockney accent with comic virtuosity. On the other hand, Jeanette Worthen's characterization of the irksome Lady Jane, who clings to Reginald when the rest of his admirers have deserted him for Archibald, is blunted by an annoying hamminess...