Word: expressive
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...Reactionary Society would like to publicly express its outrage at the biased, incomplete and distorted stories of the activities of the Society which are being spread by the left wing journalistic minority of the College, in particular by the Harvard CRIMSON, the Times-Republican and WHRB...
...order to dispel the confusion which has been caused by the erroneous stories spread by the CRIMSON and Times-Republican spies, the Reactionary Society would firmly and publicly like to express the principles which led to the formation of the Society...
...Pennsylvania Railroad from Washington to Philadelphia in two hours-as fast as the crack Congressional Limited. The same day, another Aerotrain rolled out of Chicago over the tracks of the New York Central and highballed 284 miles to Detroit in four hours, an hour better than the fastest passenger express. Even more impressive than its speed is the Aerotrain's low operating cost. For the Chicago-Detroit run, fuel cost only $18, about one-fourth the costs of a conventional^ train. G.M. engineers estimate that the Aerotrain can be operated 80% loaded, at fares of 2? a mile (present...
...getting a great deal out of the actor. By revealing personal things about himself, Anderson explained, Kazan gets his actors to do the same--making their experience available to them for interpreting a role. As a writer very conscious of the theater, Anderson said that if an actor could express something better with a gesture he was willing to let a line go. This attitude was not hard to understand, since Anderson writes the small play and depends heavily on under the line meanings. Once a writer accepts changes, he went on, he has an obligation not to undermine...
...they'll-know-I'm-intellectual school is heavily represented in this issue by Ernest Wight's "catatonic crocodile--bogged deep in mud" and Robert Johnson's two poems. One of Johnson's poems, "The Subway Beggars," might have been very effective, but at the end he attempts to express the commuters' horrow at the ugliness of life through a reference to Praxitcles, which seems ludicrous appearing as it does in the minds of average subway-riders. Peter Heliczer's "Conduct Since Birth" is fairly good, but parts of it are incomprehensible, and in this particular poem there seems utterly...