Word: jeffreys
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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Yale fanatic Nordhaus will sit across the Yale Bowl from his son tomorrow. According to the elder Nordhaus, son Jeffrey '89 is just exhibiting transitory sentiments...
Penn at Harvard Brown at Dartmouth Columbia at Cornell Yale at Princeton Last Week Year to Date Jeffrey A. Zucker President Harvard, 23-21 Dartmouth, 17-16 Cornell, 17-14 Princeton, 35-31 4-1 33-7 .825 Nick Wurf Sports Editor Harvard, 21-18 Brown,27-7 Cornell, 38-6 Princeton,25-12 3-2 30-10 .750 Bob Cunha Staff Writer Penn, 23-21 Brown, 10-9 Columbia, 24-10 Princeton, 31-17 3-2 28-12 .700 Wally Rutecki '83 Wide Receiver Cult Figure Guest Selector Harvard, 24-17 Dartmouth, 17-14 Cornell, 28-7 Princeton...
...character's crass politics and sexuality with a devil-may-care Irish charm. Laura Gonzales, who plays the prostitute Rose of Lima, sings and moves with the sensuality of an Irish Kate Bush. And the song and dance team of Bonnie Prince Charlie (Patrick Bradford) and his singing corpse (Jeffrey Korn) are an absolute triumph of macabre hilarity...
Dogg's Hamlet opens with Abel, played by Fouad Onbargi, and Baker, played by Jeffrey Wise, throwing a football and yelling "Brick!" at each other. The boys' teacher Dogg, played by Andrew Watson, soon appears, calling them to order, and the audience hears its first conversation in Dogg. The dialogue is rendered intelligible only by the actors' movements, but eventually bits and pieces of the language are made clear with the help of Easy, a mover played by Amos Gelb, who speaks normal English...
...fast-talking and critical interrogator who loves to give the actors a hard time. After he insists on watching the rest of the play with the audience, Macbeth continues. But the disgusted and frustrated actors refuse to emote, providing a humorous rendition which far outstrips their first, deadpan performance. Jeffrey Wise as Banquo loosens up and Linus Gelber, as Ross, becomes delightfully cynical. Cannon makes a marked improvement here as well since he no longer tries to convey Macbeth's determination by unnecessarily shouting the lines...