Word: joshing
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...didn't play great but we did what it took to win," number-seven player Josh Horwitz said...
Freshmen Marty Clark and Josh Horwitz owned the courts, each controlling the "T"--the center of the court--from the start. Seventh-seeded Horwitz, who's had a "long, ongoing rivalry" with his opponent, Dudley Nostrond, used his newly-acquired, explosive, deceiving forehand to annihilate his opponent, 15-6, 15-8, 15-6. Clark, playing at fifth seed, didn't even let his opponent in the door, shutting...
...Masland (HARVARD) d. Dave Rosen (F&M), 15-10, 15-8, 15-6; 5. Marty Clark (HARVARD) d. Al Aspen (F&M), 15-4, 15-9, 15-5; 6. Jeremy Fraiberg (HARVARD) d. Maurice Genser (F&M), 15-5, 18-17, 15-3; 7. Josh Horwitz (HARVARD) d. Dudley Nostrond (F&M), 15-6, 15-8, 15-6; 8. Paul Gardi (HARVARD) d. Bill Marvin (F&M), 12-15, 18-17, 15-12, 15-11; 9. Seth Handy (HARVARD) d. Prashant Tibrawalla...
...first the play, written by Jerome Lawrence and Robert E. Lee, seems a little fragmented, and Thoreau (Josh Frost) ditsy rather than wise. But in the course of the performance, the play takes form. Lawrence and Lee use a series of flashbacks explaining Thoreau's civil disobedience and his getting out of jail, as well as a dream sequence involving the Mexican war. Also, various characters, such as Emerson and Thoreau's mother, appear to say things from the past, as voices from Thoreau's memory...
...Josh Preven plays Hoss, the paranoid lead. Hoss is a man near the top--afraid of those climbing up from behind and determined to unseat those above him. Preven is convincing and forceful as he handles lines that could all too easily have become overacted in the hands of someone less skilled...