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...around 350 lbs., Orson Welles' presence is more commanding than ever. But gone is the baby-faced villainy that made Harry Lime and Mr. Rochester essays of anarchy, and muffled is the sly sardonic spirit with which Welles, as a 24-year-old enfant terrible, created Citizen Kane. Even as a tired king of the jungle, though, Welles, now 59, easily dominated the festivities at Los Angeles' Century Plaza Hotel where the American Film Institute gave him its Life Achievement Award. Before an audience of 1,200, including Frank Sinatra, Charlton Heston and Joseph Cotten, Welles...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People, Feb. 24, 1975 | 2/24/1975 | See Source »

Yale has lost its all-American and all-time scoring leader Bobby Kane, and the Eli offense has suffered for it. Its leading scorer most of the season has been a defenseman, D'Arcy Ryan...

Author: By Andy Quigley, | Title: Icemen Entertain Hapless Bulldog Six | 2/22/1975 | See Source »

...classic Peanuts, Lucy tells Linus about Rosebud as he starts to watch Citizen Kane. Any true whodunit can be ruined that way--it's a foolproof test. The most facile of the genre proceed according to a formula, and if you're good enough--as my mother is with Perry Massons--you can guess the victim, and then, the murderer, nine times...

Author: By Paul K. Rowe, | Title: What The Butler Saw | 2/6/1975 | See Source »

...Citizen Kane [1941]. Produced by Orson Welles, directed by Welles, and starring Welles, this American film classic is about the rise and fall of a newspaper emperor, Charles Foster Kane, a shallow disguise for his real-life counterpart, William Randolph Hearst. Hearst was so enraged by Welles's film that he suppressed it in many areas of the country. Welles co-authored the script too, with Herman J. Mankiewicz, who later had a major altercation with Hearst when he crashed into a car belonging to a friend of the newspaper king--right outside one of Hearst's lavish estates...

Author: By Lester F. Greenspoon, | Title: TELEVISION | 10/17/1974 | See Source »

Robert Tonis, chief of the University police, said last night that "as far as I know the police were prompt" and that Marjorie P. Kane, administrator of the Carpenter Center, had not mentioned the complaints of delay to him in several conversations since the incident...

Author: By Walter Rothschild, | Title: Employees Charge Police Slow to Respond to Call | 9/16/1974 | See Source »

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