10 research outputs found

    The Grizzly, November 18, 1996

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    Bears Beat Dickinson, Make NCAA Playoffs • Security and RLO Work Through Changes • Opinion: Question of Security; An Insider Throwing out a Line; One of Four Seasons; It\u27s All in Your Head • Concert and Jazz Bands to Perform • Jude: Hardy\u27s Novel Arrives in the Flesh • Bears Win Conference Championship To Make NCAA Playoffs!!! • Getz and Finnegan Receive Post-Season Honorshttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/grizzlynews/1392/thumbnail.jp

    The Grizzly, October 14, 1996

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    ENIAC\u27s Ursinus Connection Revealed • Frat Disciplined for Alcohol Distribution • Zero Tolerance • Campus Vandalism Under Investigation • Michael Lerner Discusses Politics of Learning • Opinions: Religious Freedom • Homecoming \u2796 • Kicking Some Balls for Charity • Be Kind to Your Body: Tips for a Safer Workout • Spotlight: Lakita Smith • Bears Still Rolling • Men\u27s Soccer Ties Eastern 1-1 • Women\u27s Soccer Continues to Struggle • Men\u27s Cross Country Team Places Tenth at Invitational • Volleyball Goes 8-4https://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/grizzlynews/1388/thumbnail.jp

    The Grizzly, October 1, 1997

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    Berman Museum Exhibit Features Work of Sidney Quinn • Pfahler Renovations Continue • New Economics Faculty Introduced • Two Faculty Additions in English • Works From the New English Faculty • Opinion: Sculpture Cheesed; Conspiracy Theories, the Media, and Open-Minded Inquiry; A Quick Lesson in EcBa 100; The Things You Might Not Know About Ursinus • Domenick Scudera Directs proTheater\u27s Fall Production of Brecht on Brecht • Biloxi Blues: At Ease and in Top Form • Despite Shaky Start, Guenther\u27s Bears Optimistic • Women\u27s Soccer on a Roll • Men\u27s Soccer off to a Slow Starthttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/grizzlynews/1405/thumbnail.jp

    The Lantern Vol. 65, No. 2, Spring 1998

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    • Mother • The Mountain • The Record-Keeper • In Response to Bonjour monsieur Gauguin • Farewell Again • The Midwife • A Farrier by Trade • Civilization • I Don\u27t Know the Language • Friday Nights at the Fights • Naked • Ano • Unoriginal Premonition: The Series • My Muse • I\u27ve Been Slimed! • Chance in Miseryhttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/lantern/1152/thumbnail.jp

    The Grizzly, October 29, 1997

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    Pennsylvania German Art Featured at Berman Art Museum • Pfahler Workers Dismissed • New Chaplain Introduced to Community • Commonwealth Brawl Raises Student Concern • Opinion: Award Winning My Ass; A Sweet Suite; Kudos to the College; Hail to the Queen; Leaving Home for Homecoming • Ghost Stories • Bears to Clash with Muhlenberg Mules • Men\u27s B-ball Gearing Up • Player Profiles: Lieberman, Steigerwalt Lead by Example; Mahoney a Constant Force for Young Women\u27s Teamhttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/grizzlynews/1408/thumbnail.jp

    The Grizzly, March 24, 1997

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    Alternative Spring Break Unites Students, Charity • Author Ntozake Shange Reads, Lectures in Olin • New Chair of Campus Ministries Committee • Wicks House to Open in Fall • Ursinus is Ranked Among Best Science Schools • Opinion: Some Advice to Mr. Leahy; All Good Things; Liberal Arts Education Part II, Awareness Weeks; Letters from Great Britain; Let\u27s Get it Straight; A Tree or not a Tree, That is the Question • Something Old, Something New, Something Borrowed, Something Blur • The Tempest: Wayfaring Weather • Lady Bears Lose ECAC Championship • Baseball Starts Season at 4-7 Pace • Women\u27s Lacrosse Wins Year\u27s First Contest • Men\u27s Tennis Falls to Moravian • Rhodenbaugh and Minnich Honored as SAAC Chairs • Softball Off to 10-4 Start • Torsone an All-American • Gymnastics Team Places 8th at Nationals • Women\u27s Tennis Wins • USA Wrestling Lineup Announcedhttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/grizzlynews/1400/thumbnail.jp

    The Grizzly, October 7, 1996

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    The Compassionate Spirit : Berman\u27s Newest Offering • A Sugar-Free Halloween Party for Diabetic Children • Sigma Chi Delta: Making an Impact • Roundtable Discussion: Breakdown of the Oslo Accord and Peace in Israel • Olympian Returns to Collegeville • Opinions: Letters from Ireland; Security is Here to Help; One Nation Under God; The Death of a Man, no More • You Can\u27t Take it With You, But You Can Enjoy it While You\u27re There • Spotlight: Roberto Diaz-Luong • Setting Goals to Stay on Track Towards Physical Fitness • My Hero: Stir Fry Guy • Coach Gros Honored • Field Hockey Drops Three • Foster Honored By Patriot League • Volleyball Falls To 6-13 • Bears Clobber Tide • Men\u27s Soccer Defeats Washingtonhttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/grizzlynews/1387/thumbnail.jp

    The Grizzly, February 23, 1998

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    State Representative Speaks to the Ursinus Community • Bringing a Campus Together • Bass Voices His Views on Anti-Semitism • Opinion: Greeks Respond to Rudloff\u27s Article; Alumna Remembers Separate Dorms; A Faculty Member\u27s Concern on American Punishment; Interventionism as United States Policy? • The Grizzly Goes Online • French Exam No Problem for 5 UC Students • Mother Courage Takes the Stage • Specialty Housing News • Mike Green Speaks About A.A. • The Drawing Room Deceits • Basketball Updates • Water Polo, Anyone? • Asper, Johnson Provide Excitement at Regionals • Bears Travel to Hopkins for Playoffs • Men\u27s Hoops Win • Another Commendable Effort by Ursinus Gymnastshttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/grizzlynews/1415/thumbnail.jp

    The Grizzly, September 30, 1996

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    Helen Zia Speaks on Views of an Asian American Feminist • New Committee Formed to Reduce Vandalism • The 1996-1997 Freshman Class Officers • Graduate School Presentation to be Held Next Wednesday • Gilicinski addresses The Color of Atoms • Research Funding and Presentations • Opinions: My Kingdom for a Phone; War Cries Have Begun; Mourning Tupac Shakur; It\u27s Not Your Fault; Are There Elections This Year?; The Ruby is Not Dead • The S.U.N. is Rising • Family Day • Test Your Strength • Let\u27s Vacate and do Service! • Conserve, Conserve, Conserve! Using Your Energy to Save Energy • Powerful Voir Dire Presents Thought-Provoking Look at Society • Women\u27s Soccer Has Rough Week • Bears Win Fourth in a Row • Volleyball Finds Winning Ways • Men\u27s Soccer Falls to 3-6 • Field Hockey Nets First Winhttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/grizzlynews/1386/thumbnail.jp

    Lesbian Broadway: American Theatre And Culture, 1920-1945

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    Lesbian Broadway: American Theatre and Culture, 1920-1945 is a project of reclamation that begins to document a history of lesbianism on Broadway. Using drama about lesbianism as its vehicle, this study investigates white, middle-class, female homosexuality in the United States from 1920 to 1945 and explores the convergence of Broadway drama, lesbianism, feminism, sexology, eugenics, and American popular culture. While the methodologies employed here vary by chapter, the project as a whole reflects a cultural excavation and analysis of lesbian dramas in their appropriate socio-historical contexts and suggests new critical approaches for studying this neglected collection of plays. Chapter One re-visits the feminist possibilities of realism, specifically lesbian realist drama of the 1920s and 30s, in order to reconsider how genre, feminist criticism, and historical context can inform socio-sexual readings of lesbian drama. Building on this foundation, Chapter Two explores a series of lesbian characters on Broadway that undermines and frequently reverses dominant sexological assumptions about the nature of and threats posed by lesbianism. These plays, when read comparatively, reveal a hierarchy of threatening lesbian types built on theoretical and historical constructions of masculinity. Chapter Three highlights how sexological and eugenic readings of lesbian antagonists dovetail to reveal a shared cultural perception of lesbians as abnormal, base, and immoral females and, consequently, as a threat to social order. A dramaturgical reading suggests how one might complicate understandings of these threats to the social order to view them as progressive depictions of lesbian power and departures from traditional love-triangle tropes. Chapter Four offers a literary and historical reading of Christa Winsloe's Girls in Uniform (1932) that reveals how Winsloe draws parallels between authoritarianism and heteronormativty in a multivalent critique of repressive social structures that were, in 1931, on the rise in Germany. The conclusion explores the contested terrain of feminism and realism and the potential ramifications of grouping these plays together to write a lesbian theatre history
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