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...almost outnumbering the 7,000,000 inhabitants and bringing in $523 million in foreign exchange. The visitors come for the Vienna Staatsoper and the Salzburg Festival, and to ski at resorts like Obergurg, Kitzbuehel, and St. Anton, but above all for the easy informality of Austrian life and the mellow sentimentality of the neighborhood Heurigen (wine festivals). After all, says one Viennese student, "We like eating, drinking, dancing and loving. If that's not the good life, it'll do until something better comes along...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Austria: The Disneyland of Europe | 5/21/1965 | See Source »

...Soviet Union, is now 75; most of his rising lieutenants are pro-Peking. A Viet Nam united under Communist rule would, for the foreseeable future, remain a Peking satellite. It is absurd to suggest that after winning all of Viet Nam the Communists would then sit back and turn "mellow." Inevitably, they would seek domination of the whole area, and there is no sign that they would be resisted except in Thailand-and even here the Red pressure would be enormous...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Essay: VIET NAM: The Right War at the Right Time | 5/14/1965 | See Source »

...warn you-the play lacks wisdom." What the play has is wildness, chaos, raw youthful exuberance, an ardent desire to shock, and a compulsion to spew up nausea in the accents of lyric delirium. One line sets the tone of the play: "I see the world in a mellow light: it is the Lord God's excrement...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theater: Eros Degraded | 5/14/1965 | See Source »

Make the Frost-laden atmosphere mellow...

Author: By Felicia Lamport, | Title: Political Clinkers and Cultural Slag | 5/6/1965 | See Source »

Most of the selections by poets Richard Eberhart and Stephen Sandy are disappointingly shallow and listless, with the exception of Sandy's comic verses entitled "The Sultan Wears a Crimson Turban." John Allman's poem, full of mellow nostalgia for "childhood and the family," get ponderously explicit in spots...

Author: By Eugene E. Leach, | Title: The Harvard 'Advocate' | 4/28/1965 | See Source »

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