Word: share
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...Herold (1.14 goals-against average) and the rest of the Harvard defense (special honors for yesterday go to fresh-man Michael Smith), the game will stand as one more trophy in a young season that has already seen its share of award-winning performances. The contest marked the second time in seven games the offense was shutout, and the second time that the shutout was matched...
There was much about the 1960s that Capp did not like: he made the comic folk of Dogpatch share their panels with radical folk singer Joanie Phoanie and hairy thugs from S.W.I.N.E. (Students Wildly Indignant About Nearly Everything). Capp gradually alienated his college-age audience, which switched to more congenial strips like Walt Kelly's Pogo and Garry Trudeau's Doonesbury. Today fewer than 400 papers still carry Li'l Abner. For a while, Capp remained a perverse favorite on the campus lecture circuit. But he became something of a recluse after 1972, when a judge...
...also did not ennoble William Safire, the Nixon speechwriter turned columnist who seeks to establish-with the repetitious use of labels like Lancegate -that all politicians are as shabby as Nixon. Cheap-shot comparisons are an old and dubious journalistic device: as if two people who share one trait can be said to share them all. New York magazine got in a worse cheap shot by egregiously referring to Lance as Carter's Bebe Rebozo...
However, the games must go on between them unless they want to go indoors and share the dispiriting company of the televegetables and endure endless chronicles of aches and pains. They enumerate their own heart burns between the games. Weller is divorced, alienated from his family, and went broke in business when he was fleeced by his partners. Fonsia threw her husband out (or perhaps devoured him) and so estranged her only son that he won't even come to see her on visitors' days. Unfortunately, information delivered as narration chloroforms an audience rather than charging it with...
...like Borge to share a stage, but he can be marvelously droll in bickering with the competition. Over his squirming body, he permits the silky-tongued Marylyn Mulvey to sing "Caro nome"-between his mischievous interruptions. Several times he tartly forbids her to touch the piano. Sopranos bend pianos, he tells the audience, by leaning against them. At one point he confides that the singular of Portuguese is Portugoose. For the singular Borge there is no known plural. - T.E.K...