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...perhaps most striking of the collaborators is photographer Gordon Willis. His lighting captures the muffled diffusion of city sun, the dank swank of a resort ballroom, the verdant warmth of a mid-afternoon in the park. Last year his talent was used only to dress up the dross of End of the Road -a film which burst apart by emphasizing the presence of violence, and not its causes; here he contributes to the success of a minor masterpiece which takes a very cool, bitterly funny look at some very harsh truths...

Author: By Michael Sracow, | Title: FilmsLittle Murdersat the Cheri | 3/22/1971 | See Source »

...Also, the game doesn't get started till 4 p. m.," he said. "So by the half we'll have to get accustomed to playing on a pretty dank field...

Author: By Robert W. Gerlach, | Title: Undefeated Booters at Williams As Offense Continues to Sputter | 10/14/1970 | See Source »

...word that sums up conditions at New York's most infamous jail is precisely the one that Chief Justice Burger used: "miserly." Known appropriately enough as the Tombs, the Manhattan House of Detention for Men is stuffed with close to 2,000 prisoners; it is a dank fortress built to hold 932 at most. Last week, as if to dramatize the Chief Justice's appeal for penal reform, 800 Tombs prisoners erupted in a window-smashing, furniture-throwing, bed-sheet-burning display of frustration brought on by inhumane conditions and the apparent indifference of the outside world...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Law: The Black Hole of Manhattan | 8/24/1970 | See Source »

...State Department, which calls it "a very important question." In many areas, it is rapidly becoming the prime concern of American diplomats. In Rabat, U.S. Consul Joseph Cheevers is besieged by requests for such items as antiscorbutic vitamin C, soap and blankets from American inmates of Morocco's dank jails (40 to a room). At the same time, he is handling twice as many requests for information from worried parents in the U.S. as he was a year...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Americans Abroad: The Jail Scene | 4/13/1970 | See Source »

Winding ever higher, the Cal Zephyr disappears into the dank blackness of the 6.2-mile Moffat Tunnel, which crosses the Continental Divide at an elevation of 9,239 ft. After the train emerges, H.C. Livingstone lights an after-dinner cigar and remembers aloud how he worked on the tunnel until its completion in 1928. "There were a lot of bad accidents on that job," he recalls. "In the four years it took to finish it, 81 workers were killed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Modern Living: Last Days of the Zephyr | 3/30/1970 | See Source »

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