Word: sun
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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Close and Dotten are two of the standouts in this production. Close, with a voice like the young Stevie wonder, knocks the audience out with his bluesy numbers as Jupiter, and again as the Sun, in an amusing duet in which he and the North Wind (Paul Stickney) compete to see who can remove a young man's coat the fastest...
...Irene Costello and Jeff Schantz's costumes, which, while featuring yards of lame and hundreds of sequins, are nevertheless ho-hum, large scale versions of the homemade costumes mom used to fashion for the kingergarten pageant. Notable exceptions, however, are the strangely abstract and witty outfits created for the Sun and the North Wind. In contrast to the generally amsicurish look of the costumes, Len Schnabel's set and lighting design is spare, elegant and very effective...
...week, Epton said he did not want ballots cast for him just because he is white. "I want neither money, help nor conversation from those people," he declared. "Tell them to get lost." Despite the specter of substantial white crossovers to Epton, Washington remains the clear favorite. Wrote Chicago Sun-Times Columnist Mike Royko after the upset: "Eeek, the next mayor of Chicago is going to be a black man. Let's all quiver and shake. Oh, come on. Let's all act like sensible, adult human beings."- By Susan Tifft. Reported by Christopher Ogden/Chlcago
...friend arrived at Harvard Hall at 4:30 a.m., at least an hour and a half before sunrise. Students whose friends showed up in the Yard just as the sun was rising aren't as happy as me. They didn't get tickets, because their friends were too late. You see, everybody else in line also had at least a few friends to buy for, so all of the available tickets--2000 of them--were gobbled up by the time that I stepped out of the bathtub...
...this letter, copies of which I am sending to The Harvard Crimson and the Cornell Daily Sun. I wish to make public my bitter regret about my behaviour at the Harvard-Cornell hockey games: Specifically, for throwing a bottle onto the ice at the end of the game. As a Harvard student and as a human being I am deeply ashamed. The action was wrong, irresponsible, and inexcusable. My intentions were not violent and I have been hurt by The Crimson's persistent misreporting that I threw a can that hit the Cornell goaltender. However, this does not alter...