Verb
To subject to fine or amercement; to mulct; to amerce.
Source: Webster's dictionary"Cowering down here for a night and half a day," says the novel's 17-year-old Welsh narrator, Merce Blackboro. Source: Internet
On Friday, Aug. 3, Sturt-Dilley will join the festival for International Evenings of Dance I in an excerpt from "Scenario," by Merce Cunningham, as a pre-centennial year salute to Cunningham, a choreographer and leader of American avant-garde dance. Source: Internet
The work deconstructs the choreography of a handful of post-modern dance icons — including Merce Cunningham, Martha Graham, Bob Fosse, Alvin Ailey and George Balanchine — looking at their legacies through a new lens and reflecting on what comes after. Source: Internet
Not to be overlooked is the Merce Cunningham Dance Company, March 3 - 5, also at Zellerbach Hall. Source: Internet
Johns later was the Merce Cunningham Dance Company’s artistic adviser from 1967 to 1980. Source: Internet
It’s an event in the Merce Cunningham sense, combining old pieces in a new order for a new occasion and space. Source: Internet