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Word: wagers (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Bennis presented the challenge to the presidents of Harvard B.U., B.C., UMass, Northeastern, and MIT. His wager was a case of metts, a Cincinnati sausage, against any similar Boston delicacy...

Author: By Marc M. Sadowsky, | Title: Bok Bets Boston Beans On Sox Series Success | 10/14/1975 | See Source »

...good chance" may seem a very modest resurrection for so much suffering. Like the old Armenians, Arlen is making another wager: on stoicism as the proper response to despair. It is both an honorable bet and a long shot - the only arguable portion of a unique and grieving book...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Voyage Home | 8/18/1975 | See Source »

...pumped back into it. Subsidies from public and private sources already support the flourishing nonprofit theaters that now feed Broadway. The most promising young playwrights have come from them too. Terrence McNally (Bad Habits, The Ritz) got his start at the Manhattan Theater Club. So did Mark Medoff (The Wager, When You Comin' Back, Red Ryder?). It was New Haven's Long Wharf Theater that introduced the best young British playwrights. Sam Shepard, perhaps the most promising young playwright, had his first success, The Tooth of Crime, at Princeton's McCarter Theater. Joe Papp is right when...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Show Business: Boom on Broadway | 4/28/1975 | See Source »

THIS PLAY IS about students, but if it seems familiar to audiences around here it's probably less because its characters are like people we know than because so many plays recently have used the same sort of situation and devices (plays like Moonchildren and The Wager). What these plays have in common is the use of clever, Tom Stoppard-like dialogue as a facade, covering emotions that are revealed in a dramatic crisis. Paul Ableman is no Tom Stoppard, but his brand of collegiate wit keeps the surface of his play funny and entertaining...

Author: By James Gleick, | Title: Waiting for Julia | 12/14/1974 | See Source »

...Marx brothers and Sleuth and produces two good performances, from Kenneth Oilman as Ward and Kristoffer Tabori as Leeds. Mark Medoff, whose play When You Comin' Back, Red Ryder? was an off-Broadway success last season, has a rare talent for juxtaposing fear and fun. Though The Wager lacks enough emotional depth to make Medoff's high speed verbal games truly revealing of character and motive, this is his best play so far, and it seems to signal even better plays to come...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Theater: Word Games | 11/4/1974 | See Source »

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