Word: wolfs
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...council hopefuls responded to CLAGA's invitation and were present at the meeting last Thursday. CLAGA members "highly endorsed" incumbent councilors Saundra Graham and David E. Sullivan, and challenger Alice Wolf, all running on the liberal Cambridge Civic Association (CCA) slate. CCA incumbents Francis H. Duehay '55 and David A. Wylie got regular endorsements as well as challenger William L. Durette...
Three Little Pigs (Walt Disney) is the latest Silly Symphony in color. It shows two disgraceful pink porkers lazily building themselves shacks out of straw. A wolf blows their houses down. The lazy pigs have a more industrious brother who has just completed a brick mansion, in which he allows them to take refuge. When the wolf attempts to huff & puff this house down, he fails ignominiously. He then tries to climb down the chimney. The lazy pigs are alarmed. The industrious pig builds a roaring fire, singes the wolf's tail...
...showed up at the meeting, including incumbent city councilors Francis H. Duehay '55, Saundra Graham, David E. Sullivan, David A. Wylie, all endorsed by the liberal Cambridge Civic Association (CCA), and Mayor Alfred E. Vellucci. Challengers present included Richard Branson, Francis Budryk, William L. Durette Jr. '85 and Alice Wolf, another CCA-endorsed candidate...
...last seen on-screen playing WarGames with a renegade Defense Department computer. This time he is a young thief who dashes to the aid of a beautiful princess and her cavalier, under a spell that turns her into a hawk by day and the cavalier into a wolf by night. Actors have had scenes with predators before, but most of them were agents. Broderick confesses that he was "scared stiff' to play opposite this beady, beaky old pro. Still, when your co-star is the thing with feathers, all you can do is wing...
...know." In the original Russian version, the word is nevezhda, which means "an ignorant person." Krokodilovy slyozy, which translates literally as "tears of the crocodile," derives from a Russian fable similar to the Western tale. Hullabaloo, which harks back at least to the 18th century English wolf-hunting cry of "halloo-baloo," appeared as shumikha, which means "uproar." Hooligan is simply khuligan in Russian, with precisely the same meaning in English...