Word: bulks
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...even in its embryonic state this show seems better than average, it has to be because of Annal's magnificent sets, the best since Sean Kenny's for Oliver. Without much bulk, they suggest variety and expanse; without (I suspect) too much money, they suggest a show budgeted well over half a million dollars. The only unfortunate touches are a cartoon-blue ocean background in the lighthouse scene and a sickly dash of pink in the finale...
...North Vietnamese leave the South, and the U.S. withdraws the bulk of its forces. An expanded international force moves into populated areas. Then, "as the National Liberation Front renounces force, it is guaranteed participation in the political life" of South Viet Nam. 3) Free elections are held, supervised by international observers. The U.S. withdraws completely, leaving only the international force. 4) "Through direct negotiation, the two parts of Viet Nam decide whether to unite or remain separate," and the international force is withdrawn...
...pawnbrokers, junk dealers, new-and used-car dealers, and hackney cabs. In Los Angeles, policemen going on duty must pause for a reading of schoolchildren's essays on the glories of the L.A.P.D. Red tape envelops every police department, but few can compete with New York's for sheer bulk. A New York cop who arrests a teen-age drug addict must fill out well over 100 forms?enough to make any but the most conscientious think twice before stopping a suspect. And the cop on the beat still uses the same weapons he did 100 years ago?the billy...
...financing arrangements. Purpose of the ten-year credit package was to stanch flight from the pound by countries in the so-called "sterling area," which consists of all British dependencies and Commonwealth members (except Canada), plus such other countries as Kuwait, Jordan, Libya and Ireland. Because they hold the bulk of their reserves in pounds, most sterling-area members suffered automatic losses when the pound was devalued-and a number of them have lately been selling off large amounts of sterling out of fear that Britain might be forced to devalue again...
...result is that in most productions, Tristan and Isolde are lovers who seem to forget that they have bodies. Sometimes the audience wishes it could forget too, in view of the age and bulk of most singers who are up to the demands of the vocal score. Not even the composer's innovation-minded grandson, Wieland Wagner, could change this. His productions introduced heavy hints of Freudian psychology, but the lovers' bond remained shrouded in symbolism. It all seemed to bear out Wagner's advice to Nietzsche that to get the most out of the opera...