Word: cranly
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Series producer William Cran has assembled a mass of material with scholarly care and storytelling verve. Each episode is dramatically built, often starting with one key event, then working backward and forward from it. The historical medicine is enlivened with spoonfuls of pop-culture sugar. (In one old TV ad, Marilyn Monroe urges a gas-station attendant to "put Royal Triton in Cynthia's little tummy." Cynthia is her new car.) Not least important is Paul Foss's urgent theme music, one of the best TV scores since The Civil...
...putting together the special, Frontline Writer-Producers Stephanie Tepper and William Cran worked closely with TIME correspondents in Europe and Washington and rummaged through material from Time Inc.'s extensive library. "One of the most useful things was having access to TIME's remarkable research files," says Sullivan. In addition, Washington Bureau Chief Strobe Talbott, an authority on arms control, topped off the show with a video essay linking European defense to global nuclear deterrence...
...White House. Draft-Kennedy movements are springing up everywhere, some of them led by former Carter supporters, and Kennedy's own elated staff members are beginning to jockey for positions in the would-be, might-be, soon-to-be campaign. Says an enthusiastic aide to California Senator Alan Cran- ston, the Senate whip and a top member of the Democratic establishment: "Everybody in California is just sitting and waiting for Kennedy. He has the Machinists Union, the United Auto Workers and the Beverly Hills crowd. What else is there...
Other Yale standouts are Jeff Spendelow at 177 pounds and sophomore sensation Dave Cran at 150 pounds. Harvard's Rich Starr, the Crimson's winningest wrestler this season with a 14-2 mark, will meet Spendelow, and Dean Sheppard will take on Chan...
...Loves Factory. Although Canadian, British and U.S. films make strong showings at Expo, Czechoslovakia again emerges as Expo's, and possibly the world's, most formidable new film maker. Its most ambitious efforts are two multiple-projector movies, cum-brously named Polyvision and Diapolye-cran. Polyvision discards the idea of a screen, projects its images against a score of whirling spools, globes and spheroids. Again the form outstrips the content: what delights the eye is just another Iron Curtain version of the old love story of man and factory, uniting to turn out ingots, pencils and marzipan. Diapolyecran...