Word: joans
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Clifton '63 of Leverett House and Springfield, Ohio, was chosen President of Phillips Brooks House in a recent election. Joan H. Budyk '63 of Jordan Hall and Chicago, Illinois, will be first vice-President during the coming year. Richard A. Levine '63 of Leverett House and Fall River was elected second vice-President...
Winging into St. Petersburg with parasol at the ready, Major Stockholder Joan Whitney Payson joined Manager Charles Dillon Stengel for baseball's least auspicious event of the week: the launching of the National League's fledgling New York Mets. Asked if he thought he could alchemize a champion from the best dross that Whitney money could buy, Casey instinctively retorted: "I expect to win every day." Then, from the most voluble player in the league came an uncharacteristic halt in the Mach 2 verbiage. "Maybe," sighed Casey, "I'll be shell-shocked...
...complaints from British critics that the grand old company is not what it used to be. Perhaps not. But it is demonstrably less cobwebby and more experimental now than it has been for a dozen years. Its new productions-Macbeth, Romeo and Juliet and Shaw's Saint Joan-are generally characterized by innovation, and all worth seeing...
Actress Jefford reverses herself, unfortunately, in the Old Vic's Saint Joan. The maid of Domremy, by Shaw's description in his preface, was one of the first of modern women, a take-charge overlord of men. But Jefford's Joan is a wide-eyed schoolgirl heroine, as coy and cute as Sabrina fair. The production also suffers from the paralyzed, tableau style of Douglas Scale's direction. In the end, Saint Joan is the least remarkable of the Old Vic's productions, but it is paradoxically the outstanding one of the lot. For Shakespeare...
...JOAN DAVIS...