Word: hortons
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...five words, as in one inebriated axiom for living: "Camaraderie .. honest Arbeit* .. profane V?geln.** Nothing beats it!" (This is translated in a footnote, or, as Russ insists, an "editor's titnote": "* Work. ** Fucking.") His Berlin affair with German hottie Renate H?tte (later known, in Russ's "Mudhoney," as Rena Horton) is recalled as an evening of "succulent schlemmers and Gatling-gun Gesundheits!" Limning an energetic tryst with one Mrs. Janet Buxton, he apostrophizes: "Oh, what hath headboards and Hemingway wrought!" (I give up: what hath pine and Papa wrought?) And in a reverie on his double hernia, Meyer writes: "Cause...
Scoring: H Goals: Shaughnessy 2, Gotha 2, Clark, Moroz. H Assists: Kunter, Belitsos, Clark. P Goals: Book 3, Spofford 2, Murray, Hartman, Marabella. P Assists—Kaden, Polk-Williams, Horton. Saves: H Mancini 6, M Harper...
...Jones, a tall, genial charmer who sported the goatee and floppy bow tie of a small-town art teacher, had plenty of career left. He reunited with Geisel and directed two Dr. Seuss half-hours, How the Grinch Stole Christmas! and Horton Hears a Who! He wrote two delightful memoirs, Chuck Amuck and Chuck Reducks. And for a 1985 Museum of Modern Art tribute to Warner Bros. animation, he drew new Bugses and Daffys on the Manhattan museum's walls--a tacit acknowledgment from the world of high culture that this cartoon man was a significant creator of modern...
...dancing officials would much prefer the sport to grab headlines with outstanding performances. But as Keith Horton, general secretary of Britain's National Ice Skating Association, admits: "It's been great publicity. It's given us the exposure, which has to be good for the sport." The last time ice dancing made news was back in 1984 when Jayne Torvill and Christopher Dean scored 12 perfect six marks out of a possible 18 with their performance of Bolero at the Sarajevo Olympics. Torvill and Dean transformed the sport from a mere imitation of fairly staid ballroom dancing techniques done...
...inclination to innovate, producing new lifts and spins, has largely been accepted by the sport's administrators. Says Morris: "There is a difference between movements which are suggestive - and we all know what we are talking about - and movements which are trying to be innovative and athletic." Horton believes that the sport has to move forward and continue to innovate, and can do that without infringing the technical aspects. "All sport evolves, and you look to do something different," he says. "Athletes should always be pushing at boundaries...