Word: replayer
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Things may not be quite that disheartening, however. Although for most of the second half last Saturday it seemed that what was happening to Harvard was a replay of last year's Cornell game, this is not precisely the case. Last fall, the Crimson went to Ithaca with a 2-1 record, a solid defense, and high hopes of retaining the Ivy crown. It came back with its offense permanently stalled, a defense that had been shredded by a one-man attack, and its confidence badly shaken. Needless to say, the season wasn't extremely successful...
Flanked by some of his top aides, Richard Nixon last week unveiled what he called a "historic" document: the first annual report of the President's Council on Environmental Quality. What emerged from the three-month labor was basically a replay of familiar environmental concerns...
...Olivier's Hamlet, all kinds of other films (including instant home movies), Broadway musicals, or how-to series by Arnold Palmer or Julia Child. Owners will be able to play the cartridges at any hour of the day or night and, if they have the right equipment, to replay a sequence or freeze the action in order to study Palmer's back swing or tend to a squalling baby. Because the signal goes by wire to the TV set, the picture reproduction will be far sharper than on today's over-the-air video...
...notes to the recorded version of the work, is also a name for some ancient Arabian modes. The piece is in four parts, somewhat loosely-structured, and is partly aleatory-at a random signal from the percussionist, the performers jump back to an earlier section of the work and replay it, in order to destroy whatever structure may have been created. I can have no quarrel with the performance-it seemed all right to me, but the work itself seems open to question. Aleatory music-music based on chance-is well-established, but is it legitimate music...
...radicals comparatively weak only during May. Throughout the year, they proved able only to fight battles, not campaigns. University Hall. Holyoke Center, and the Center for International Affairs were briefly occupied. picketed, or otherwise besieged upwards of 20 times this year, but none of the actions provoked a replay of the crisis of 1969. Radical campaigns started, flared, then halted; disciplinary hearings before the Committee on Rights and Responsibilities were their principal monuments. For the most part, the rest of the University noted the expulsions or suspensions which resulted from these hearings with a nod, and then went back...