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Word: hides (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
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Usage:

...whatever the viewer's orientation happens to be, I don't see how he can escape the feeling that this film is somehow cruel. Heat, unlike its predecessor, Trash, has no stellar Holly Woodlawn performance to hide this fact from us. Somewhat cruel to the audience, yes--Heat has an icy cool sense of moral superiority underlying it, as it is constantly beating us over the heads with caricatures of ourselves while maintaining its own sang froid, and we should resent a movie that makes us bleed without bleeding itself...

Author: By Kevin J. Obrien, | Title: Torture by Heat | 11/6/1972 | See Source »

...spent almost five years in Lewisburg and during that time I didn't see any evidence of racial problems. When a man is in prison, it just doesn't matter what his color is." He then went on to defend George Jackson. "Let's face it. Nobody could ever hide a gun in their hair. Any GI who's ever carried a 45 knows that this whole story given by prison officials is pure bunk." The entire crowd, led by the group of Teamsters, cheered loudly. Only one more tough question remained. Someone asked if the New Crusader approved...

Author: By J. R. Eggert, | Title: Hoffa: From Teamster Boss to New Crusader | 11/1/1972 | See Source »

...Keith Sykes) as he skulks round Japan, looking for help and a place to hide after he goes AWOL. He is aided by sympathetic families, a bar girl, a truck driver and, ultimately, by a counseling group that convinces him that going back to base, then turning himself in, is the best thing to do. Hiroshi Teshigahara's previous film, Woman in the Dunes, (1964), was overburdened by a kind of febrile surrealism, but it at least demonstrated energy. Summer Soldiers is slackly directed in a trumped-up documentary style. Jim is a numbingly inarticulate spokesman for war resistance...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: A Festival's Moveable Feast | 10/16/1972 | See Source »

...edge of classes, explore other people's work without feeling like a spy, and just talking to other students. It is a noticeable contrast to the secretive nature of the old GSD of individual classrooms and studios filled with cubbyholes created by students for their private use, places to hide away their planning and architectural creations until the moment of the big critique. Gund Hall insists on more cooperative attitude...

Author: By Raymond A. Urban, | Title: Gund Hall: An Evaluation | 10/12/1972 | See Source »

...Dignified First Lady, above and removed from politics. Flying in a presidential 707 with nine White House staffers, six Secret Service men, one hairdresser (on loan from Elizabeth Arden) and 30 reporters and cameramen, Pat always came on to carefully chosen audiences. Her advance army did its best to hide dissenters, discourage rude questions and avoid unpleasant encounters. The atmosphere for most of the trip was summed up by Ed Reimers, M.C. for an American Cancer Society dinner in Los Angeles. Speaking to the press, Reimers cautioned, "I have been asked to announce that the only question we will entertain...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: POLITICS: Those Other Campaigners, Pat and Eleanor | 10/9/1972 | See Source »

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