Word: reappears
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...costumes from him in onion-like layers, he gives a dizzying exhibition of that half-forgotten art, the quick change. He leaves the footlights as Captain Universe, a panicky Superman who wears an aerial on his head, slips out through the curtain again as a clown, dives back to reappear almost instantly as a cross-eyed gaucho, and then-encased in a gown which is snapped around him by a body-hugging steel spring-dodders into view as Queen Victoria...
...cheers of 60,000 gathered below. For exactly 50 seconds, he extended an arm in acknowledgment. Then he went back inside. The crowd called and called again. They slanted pocket mirrors to flash the rays of the brilliant July sun in at the palace windows, but Baudouin did not reappear. "The poor boy must be tired," sighed one woman. "How can the country know that, if we don't get a chance to see him?" humphed another. "After all, we don't ask much...
...Direct Disagreement." To wind up the show, the Senators offered their star performer an opportunity to reappear and comment on what had been said. But General MacArthur was willing to let things stand as they were. "I think it should be understood, however," he wrote, "that certain of the testimony given by some of the subsequent witnesses did not coincide with my own recollection and record of the events, and with many of their opinions and judgments I am in direct disagreement." MacArthur also had a last dart for the man who fired him: "Insofar as the investigation dealt with...
...Radcliffe choir to sing at Annex chapel will reappear in a few weeks for the first time since the war, Elizabeth Menzel '51, conductor and organizer of the new choir announced last night...
...Greco, with only a rigid mask for a starting point, made a virtue of his difficulty. Cardinal Tavera's imagined hand, with its long tapering fingers, and his dark, luminous, meditative eyes perhaps have more of the painter himself than of the cardinal about them; they reappear in most of El Greco's works. But they intensify the portrait's life-in-death stillness...