Word: effective
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Last Thursday morning, in his hospital room President Johnson asked former President Eisenhower to make a goodwill tour of Asia next spring. If the General makes the tour, he will probably express his support of the Administration's Vietnam policy with the desired effect of convincing friend and foe alike that the American people--Republicans and Democrats--are solidly behind the President. In the President's mind, this move should make it abundantly clear to both Hanoi and our Asian allies that the defeat of many Democrats in the mid-term elections does not bely any widespread popular disaffection with...
Under the new rules, dormitories have the option of extending Saturday parietals to midnight. The extension of Friday parietals will have to wait until the Faculty approves a similar proposal for Harvard, which the Masters accepted last week. Parietals on weekdays will go into effect immediately...
...amount of money, however, can replace the works lost; money alone cannot effect the restoration of those harmed. Yet money is essential to the salvage operations. Alitalia has been carrying vital conservation materials free of charge, and many experts are donating their time and effort to the rescue operations. But materials must be bought and shipped on a massive scale; more conservateurs must be mobilized...
This visual reiteration of the characters' isolation and entrapment makes Sartre's themes unmistakable, but puts a heavy theatrical responsibility on the actors. Their only hold on the audience must be an unflagging physical and vocal intensity. If any effect is dissipated, the audience is already too far removed to pay further attention...
...total effect within the cage is still one of painfully entrapped lucidity. But the minute Sartre takes his characters out of the cage the intensity is diffused. He has to manipulate his philosophical stances, and as a dramatist Sartre is pretty amateur. He gives us a trio of Vichy officers who are the Enemy and not much more. Ken Tigar and James Woods play two thankless stereo-types, and Dan Chumley plays an officer who has no dramatic or thematic meaning at all. Babe is uncertain what to do with them. They end up serving as comic relief, buttoning their...