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Word: lusted (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...advisory, sent to stage and screen accounts, also included a lexicon of forbidden words and phrases: "cuties, flesh-a-scope, girlie, homosexual, immorality, lesbian, lust, naked, nothing on, nudies, nudist camp, nymphs, party girls, pervert, play girls, professional girls, prostitutes, rape, scanty panties, seduce, skin-a-scope, sex, sex rituals, sexpot, sexsational, strippers, third...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Censoring Sex | 2/12/1965 | See Source »

...Parisian cafe, Aurelie overhears a company president, a baron, and a prospector discussing plans to tap the seas of oil that, they are sure, lie under Paris's streets. The Countess is at first natively ignorant of the uses of oil, but when she learns of the industrialists' evil lust for power, and is told how oil can give them that power, she crushes them, madly. She tries them, in absentia, condemns them, and executes them by luring all the advocates of evil down an endless stairway...

Author: By Gregory P. Pressman, | Title: The Madwoman of Chaillot | 2/10/1965 | See Source »

...LOVE. In naughty Stockholm, a lively young widow (Harriet Andersson) sheds her mourning garb and goes overboard with a rakish travel agent (Zbigniew Cybulski) who persuades her that lust is for the living...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: Feb. 5, 1965 | 2/5/1965 | See Source »

...parson of no importance in a small New England town, an infantile irreverend who tries to please the kiddies by mixing divinity with inanity-"Our Father who aren't in Heaven," he keeps chirping, "Harold be Thy name." He tries to please the ladies by mixing divinity with lust, but somehow he never quite makes the scene-the redheaded heroine has to employ her husband when she brings the novel to its mystical climax. "She laughed into his throat as the chill weight pitched over her, warm beneath the chill. The wantonness of it at noon with...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: A Parson of No Importance | 2/5/1965 | See Source »

...Love & Lust. The opera's resounding success is due in large measure to the brilliantly imaginative staging of Director H. Wesley Balk, 32, who views the fable as a discourse on "spiritual realities, which run from earthy paganism to ethereal mysticism and back again, with lots of love, lust, violence and cruelty in between." To lend more punch to the love and lust departments, Balk deftly reworked several of the couplets, whose stiffly literal translation he believes is the major reason why Wise Woman previously failed in the U.S. Thus...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Opera: Grimm for Grownups | 1/29/1965 | See Source »

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