Word: dame
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...Theodore M. Hesburgh, LL.D., president of the University of Notre Dame...
...Boston Univ; 2. Radcliffe; 3. Cornell; 4. Yale; 5. Notre Dame...
...defined performance as Wilfred Shadbolt, the "assistant tormentor" who eventually wins Phoebe's hand (but not her heart). A typical Gilbert and Sullivan "light heavy," Meadow's Wilfred is too ridiculously self-important and gullible to be really threatening. Carol Flynn also has a few funny moments as awesome Dame Carruthers, responding rapturously to Sgt. Meryll's pained wooing...
Senator Barry Goldwater (R., Ariz.), in an unusually wide-ranging article scheduled for the May issue of the Notre Dame Journal of Legislation, raises the question of how "a political conservative who ordinarily is skeptical of more public spending" can support postal appropriations that the White House opposes. The Senator answers with six detailed reasons, the final one being that "free speech, and all that means to the general public and our way of life, is truly involved." Noting "the historic role of the public mails as promoting public enlightenment and the security of a free people," Senator Goldwater concludes...
...theater. Playwrights, actors and the government care. The result is variety and vitality. In the West End, London's equivalent of Broadway, 28 shows are currently running, compared with 19 on Broadway. Not all are dramatically superior works. They contain wheezy old crowd pleasers like Dame Agatha Christie's The Mouse Trap, now in its 24th year, and such flimsy sex farces as Let's Get Laid and No Sex Please, We're British. Yet a fundamental difference between London and New York City is that the English are basically committed to the play; Broadway...