Word: marylands
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Paying off a World Series bet, Maryland Republican Senators Charles Mathias and J. Glenn Beall Jr.-Baltimore Oriole fans to the end-dutifully led two elephants around to the front of the Capitol. Riding the pachyderms and still gloating over the triumph of the Pittsburgh Pirates were Pennsylvania Republican Senators Hugh Scott and Richard Schweiker. Later, Senator Scott met the visiting King and Queen of Sikkim and told them about his lofty ride. "Didn't you use a ladder to mount?" asked the Queen, onetime Manhattan Debutante Hope Cooke. "In Sikkim, we always use a ladder." Said Scott...
...Crimson has ten lettermen returning and won 11 of its last 13 contests to finish 16-10, but its schedule leaves no room for laxness--it will have to face North Carolina, Duquesne, St. John's, Maryland or Western Kentucky, and Dartmouth on the road before the Christmas holidays are over...
...important trial into an hour-long television re-creation for the purpose of public information. If anything distinguishes The Trial of the Catonsville Nine from this new form of reporting, it's Berrigan's effort to connect, to force recognition of the relationship between a criminal trial in Maryland and the burned and maimed bodies of soldiers and civilians in southeast Asia. The Catonsville trial was, for its defendants, a conscious battle to make the connection. The relationship is a necessary element of any retelling of the story. The Trial of the Catonsville Nine focuses on it, repeating it relentlessly...
...almost entirely from the court transcripts of the trial, and (with a re-write job by Saul Levitt) Michael Butler's new production is very simply a competent condensation of the events of the trial of those nine Catholic radicals who raided the draft board of small-town Catonsville, Maryland and used home-made napalm to destroy 378 folders from the 1-A file...
...Congo had "mistakenly" hit two unprotected villages in Uganda. Real anger may not be enough onstage, but Ann Whiteside's anger is so well-transformed into the anger of Mary Moylan that, at least for a moment, the years and the distance between the Cambridge stage and the Maryland courtroom are forgotten...