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...warmer Grace Kelly. There is something incongruous about a 9-to-5 Deneuve; she knows it, and plays straight a brief scene where, as Tired Working Girl, she soaks her feet in a basin. The day she quits her job she leaps back into bed-fully clothed. These moments lend life to a minor, if remarkably accurate evocation of a certain sort of life. But it gives Deneuve a chance only to mark time until she can slip into something less comfortable...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Pourquoi? | 8/22/1969 | See Source »

...often in its acting. Paul Curran and Harry Lomax gleefully caricature Lloyd George and Herbert Asquith as, respectively, fatuous and feckless. Charles Kay, made up to resemble Shaw, touchingly yet comically portrays one of the last of the 31st century's "short-livers"; Philip Locke and Jeanne Watts lend a glint of intellectual ecstasy to the bald, sexless ancients of the future. In such performances, the strands of Shaw's sometimes garrulous argument are tuned to a fine pitch, so that only a few maxims thump through ungraced by melody...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The London Stage: Metaphysical Tinker Bell | 8/15/1969 | See Source »

...break with precedent, the Harvard Corporation agreed in late June to lend the Stadium for the series of four concerts, which are now billed as "Stadium...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Joan Baez Will Begin Concerts At the Stadium | 8/12/1969 | See Source »

...Department official put it, "there is a second string to our fiddle." Russia fears a Sino-American rapprochement. At the same time, it has seemed in some instances recently that Washington was teaming with Moscow against Peking. Last week's mild overture toward China was obviously intended to lend a little leverage to U.S. negotiators by demonstrating that the U.S. seeks to communicate with both Communist giants...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign Relations: Asia After Viet Nam | 8/1/1969 | See Source »

...credited in part to the tactical genius of another, greater emperor. Hadrian had been ruling barely five years when, in A.D. 122, a frontier tour brought him to the site of the wall. He evolved (personally, according to Divine) a radical new defense plan that helped in part to lend his name to the wall. Previously, Roman soldiers had been stationed in fortlets behind the barrier; from these they were ready to be rushed to threatened segments whenever an attack was mounted. Hadrian added cavalry, giving his forces far more flexibility and speed, and enabling them to meet any attack...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Something There Is, Etc. | 7/18/1969 | See Source »

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