Word: seltzers
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...comics are in full caper. One baggypants warns the guard of a nuthouse not to send any mail to Washington. "Why not?" asks the guard. "He's dead," replies the overripe banana, skittering into the wings. Seltzer bottles spew, leers are leered, strippers strip and strip. Ann Corio re-creates her "parade strip," fragrant in the memories of generations of Harvard graduates who used to attend her frequent symposia at Boston's Old Howard. When hefty Dolores Du Vaughan* undulates out of her costume and starts to give the proscenium arch the business, there are howls of "More...
...After supporting Di Salle in 1958, this year, disenchanted with his performance, it came out for Republican James R. Rhodes. One of the chain's most profitable papers, the Press is thoroughly embedded in the community, thanks to the direction of peppy, longtime (34 years) Editor Louis B. Seltzer, 65, who has won the title of "Mr. Cleveland." Seltzer pays close attention to Cleveland's minorities, has made his paper's endorsement so valuable that it is often tantamount to election. The Press helped boost Frank Lausche from municipal judge to Cleveland mayor to Ohio Governor...
...played croquet, guzzled fruit juice at a cocktail party thrown by the Duke of Richmond and Gordon (whom he irreverently called "Your Gryce" in a broad Cockney accent), stayed up twisting at a country dancehall until 2 a.m. On race morning, while other drivers, taut and nervous, brooded over seltzer and coffee, he happily downed a huge breakfast, described the novel furnishings he was planning for his bachelor digs in London: a heated toilet seat and a 300-lb. silver coffee table made from melted-down trophy cups ("What else can you do with silver? Fill teeth...
Sarah Caldwell, director of the Boston Opera Group, will begin the discussion with a paper. Daniel Seltzer, assistant professor of English, will moderate...
...Honors, should feel a lack of commitment to this part of their education merely because they are not being paid for their participation with course credit. We are certain that this is not so widespread an attitude as the writer of the editorial implies. Larry D. Benson, Daniel Seltzer...