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Cassie Levitt, Lora Fleming, and Laura Brown were on course for the 'Cliffe as they triumphed on Saturday in the first annual Victorian Coffee Cup regatta on the Charles...

Author: By Elizabeth S. Stong, | Title: Sailors Catch the Wind, Place Teams in Nationals | 5/4/1976 | See Source »

...skippering tandem of Andy Efstathiou and Laura Brown did better in the freshman version of the GBCs at Tufts. Both skippers finished last in their first races in each division, but turned around to win their second races, finishing third overall. Harvard wound up three points behind second place MIT. Tufts was the winner again...

Author: By William E. Stedman jr., | Title: Fluky Winds Hamper Sailors In Patriot's Weekend Regattas | 4/22/1976 | See Source »

Mack skippered in the A division and collected first-, second-, third- and fourth-place finishes for a second in the division, scoring just behind Wellesley. Martha Kleinschmidt and Laura Brown were her crew...

Author: By Elizabeth S. Stong, | Title: Harvard Sailors Run Aground at MIT; Radcliffe Sees Smooth Sailing at Tufts | 4/13/1976 | See Source »

Robert Chapman's stately production of Mary Stuart succeeds handsomely in conveying the queen's dual tragedy, thanks to outstanding performances by Sarah Jane Lithgow and Laura Bartell in the leading roles. Stalking about her jail cell, villifying her jailers and judges with regal outrage, Lithgow's Mary Stuart dominates the first half of the play, outclassing every male actor in the show. Her controlled brilliance is more than matched, however, by Bartell's flamboyant portrayal of her English counterpart. Harsh, demanding, sometimes petty in her violent jealousies, Bartell's Elizabeth presents a clear dramatic contrast to Lithgow's more...

Author: By Julia M. Klein, | Title: Mary and Elizabeth: More Stately Monarchs | 3/25/1976 | See Source »

...obscure references to Law School trivia, the script is pretty funny even without the Pavlovich jokes. The best musical numbers are "Laura, Little Laura," in which Bobby describes the sad death of Laura Vue, who was eaten by a shark in the Charles (to a background chorus of wailing greasers), and "Never Tell a Lie," in which Bobby and the company act out the punishment for perjurers...

Author: By Gay Seidman, | Title: On the Case | 3/16/1976 | See Source »

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