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...Gothic vastness of the House of Parliament, a blond young Englishman wandered familiarly through the members' smoking room, the green-carpeted corridors of the Commons and its stone-flagged lobbies. But although he was duly elected to Parliament from South-East Bristol in 1950 and returned three times since, Anthony Wedgwood Benn, 35, dared not enter the Commons chamber last week. The reason: upon the death of his father, Tony Wedgwood Benn had become the second Viscount Stansgate. As a peer, he was ineligible to sit in the House of Commons...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: GREAT BRITAIN: Call Me Mister | 12/12/1960 | See Source »

...first rank in pure science. They had little else in common. Chemist Tizard, who at times "looked like a highly intelligent and sensitive frog," was the outgoing, very English son of a regular navy officer. The "very odd and very gifted" Physicist Lindemann was "repressed, suspicious, malevolent." A fanatic Englishman-by-adoption, he was a fierce ascetic who shunned sensual pleasures. Snow recalls him as "an extreme and cranky vegetarian who lived largely on the whites of eggs,† Port Salut cheese and olive...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Bring on the Scientists | 12/12/1960 | See Source »

...Beckett's symbols of the twentieth century man; they are former hoboes, now burns, who dress in the loose fitting and shabby formal clothes of the burlesque clown; they are former homosexuals, now incapable of satisfying each other beyond a furtive embrace or a titillating story about an Englishman in a brothel; and, because of Beckett's genius for paradox, they turn out to be dignified human beings...

Author: By Allan Katz, | Title: Waiting for Godot | 11/28/1960 | See Source »

...cited a question asked him by a British diplomat, who wanted to know how many U.S. information centers had been burned down in the last year. "Three," Allen replied; to which the Englishman said, "I wonder why they don't burn any of ours down anymore, as in the good old days...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Lederer, Allen Debate Condition Of U.S. Prestige | 11/5/1960 | See Source »

Eric Bentley, at the University for the year while on leave from Columbia, where he is Brander Matthews Professor of Dramatic Literature, is a forty-four year old Englishman whose name is intertwined with that of Bertolt Brecht. Through his translations, and explanations of the complex Brechtian theories of epic drama, he has been chiefly responsible for the German playwright's recent surge of popularity. An anthologizer, translator, producer, and director, Bentley today looms as one of the most respected and acute commentators on the theatrical scene...

Author: By Frederick H. Gardner, | Title: Eric Bentley | 11/4/1960 | See Source »

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