Word: sprung
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...William F. Buckley, William E. Simon, and Rep. Jack Kemp (R-N.Y.), set up shop after the 1980 elections in order to foster the growth of papers like The Review on colleges campuses around the country. So far, IEA has been fairly successful--new conservative student papers have sprung up at Harvard and Williams, as well as at Dartmouth. And the IEA's support has made The Review boys feel very important indeed--the organization's members let the paper use their names on its masthead, and Buckley even persuaded Ronald Reagan to write the paper a letter...
...important element in the production's success is Conductor Riccardo Chailly, 29. Ignoring the dry, detached school of Stravinsky playing that has sprung up in the U.S., Chailly lit into the music with true Italianate gusto. Unfortunately, the mediocre international cast of mostly non-English speakers ensured that the English libretto was a blur...
...witness had admittedly taken the law into his own hands and led a daring raid on court-protected property. Nonetheless, when he was sprung from jail on a temporary pass last week to testify in Washington on ways that farmers can be hurt by bankruptcy laws, Senators and Congressmen crowded around to shake his hand. To farmers in the dusty "bootheel" area of southeastern Missouri, and indeed to farmers all over the country, he is a hero, fighting a battle for the oppressed against unjust law. And what for? Soybeans...
Spring, it seems, has finally sprung, and finally this most frustrating of men's lacrosse seasons can get its feet off the ground. After an unwanted two-week sabbatical, Harvard's men's lacrosse travels to New Haven today to meet Yale, returning tomorrow to host Delaware...
...Massachusetts." Galluccio led a student walk-out last year, in which hundreds of Rindge and Latin students joined thousands of other area high schools to protest the recent wave of public school budget cuts. She singles out that action as one of the occasions when the estrangement that often sprung up between different groups in the school "was completely overwhelmed by a prevailing feeling that we're all from Cambridge and in it together." Galluccio admits some of the students in her class were "barely literate" when they graduate, but CRLS, she says, was a valuable experience for them. "There...