Word: bond
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Narrow Road to the Deep North is a good, serious play about zen and Japan by Edward Bond. It's not the most exciting two and half hours of theater around, but it's far from lightweight. At the Loeb mainstage, tonight, Fri, Sat, Sun, Tues...
...decadence of contemporary American culture--and they all wanted to know how we accounted for its popularity. "It's very simple," the woman who'd asked about love admitted, though, when we asked about recently published Chinese novels, "We don't like anything." I guess it was one more bond of sorts--at any rate, I felt a solidarity with her and her friends that I wouldn't have predicted. It gave a meaning to the phrases about links among the peoples of the world...
...York Stock Exchange, AT&T shares fell 2 points in two days of trading, to 43%, representing a loss of $1.1 billion to Bell stockholders. Washington's move came just as Bell had launched a massive $600 million bond issue; the company was forced to withdraw the offering until the capital markets could quiet down. Many investment analysts echoed Wall Street's Joel Leff: "You don't help by going out and attacking the widest-held and bluest-chip stock in the whole economy. You need to stimulate confidence in capitalism at this time, not stick pins...
...known names among the credits. One of the scriptwriters is Millard Kaufman, who wrote Bad Day at Black Rock. His partner is Samuel Fuller, a sort of American-primitive film maker (The Steel Helmet, The Naked Kiss) beloved of film noir aficionados. Director Terence Young has a few James Bond movies like From Russia with Love and Thunderball to his credit. Maybe these names were all rented for the occasion, as camouflage. The evidence on-screen strongly suggests that The Klansman was made pseudonymously by the Snopes family, trying to cash in on the cracker-violence genre pioneered by Walking...
Handsome and visibly upper-crust -a film producer once sought him to play the part of James Bond-Lord Lucan was thought by his friends to be the quintessence of the civilized aristocrat, a man who would raise his voice only to protest a spoiled claret or bemoan a bad shot at a grouse on the moors. After serving in the Coldstream Guards and undertaking a short, unspectacular career in business, he had retired on his $250,000 inheritance to carry on more engrossing pursuits, notably golf, skiing, the hunt and chemin de fer at Mayfair gaming clubs. His success...