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...Harvard Din and Tonics. Featuring snappy solos and cool attitude, the Dins covered their blushing audience with sweet a capella kisses at the Dins on the Blink...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Arts in Review: | 5/18/1992 | See Source »

APRIL 3--"Sweet revenge" was the entree as Harvard avenged two previous losses to UNH with a 9-6 victory at Ohiri Field...

Author: By Peggy L. Yeh, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Always on Top: A Look Back | 5/6/1992 | See Source »

...barbaric. That is an insult to centuries of creative barbarians, who have administered capital punishment by boiling in oil, burning at the stake, flaying to death, crushing, impaling, drowning, crucifying, drawing and quartering, disemboweling, gibbeting, garroting, throwing to lions and much, much worse. Cyanide, by comparison, is a sweet pink poof of cessation. Would last week's witnesses have been happier if California had used a neat bullet to the base of the brain (the method the Chinese authorities favor now)? Or if the state had injected Harris with a lethal shot of cocaine so that he would depart...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television Dances With the Reaper | 5/4/1992 | See Source »

...Jelly's Last Jam fails as dramaturgy, it succeeds much of the time as bouncy entertainment, thanks to four people. Mary Bond Davis is a first-rate upholstered mama. Tonya Pinkins is sultry, sharp-tongued and sweet-voiced as Morton's love interest. Savion Glover, 18, outdoes his own brilliant best in tap-dancing the role of the young Jelly. And as the mature Jelly, Gregory Hines vibrates with the kind of glorious triple-threat talent -- as singer, dancer and actor -- that Broadway used to revel in but hardly ever witnesses anymore...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Triple Threat | 5/4/1992 | See Source »

...maintain sympathy for a figure who never "develops" in the customary dramatic sense (let alone morally or intellectually), he nicely balances force-of-nature rambunctiousness and a shadowed befuddlement about the mysterious requirements of civilized behavior. His Ruth is vigorous and vulgar but somehow not boorish, poignantly sweet-spirited at times but never self-sentimentalizing...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: All Appetite | 4/27/1992 | See Source »

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