Word: oles
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Starts Sunday: A double-barreled comedy bill, one shot of which misfires disastrously. The hit--and it's an Ole Bullseye--is Bob Hope's and Lucille Ball's quite wondorously funny The Facts of Life. The gentleman and lady named are prey to wanderlust; but their exploits are infinitely more humorous than amorous. As for the dud shot, Ask Any Girl, well, it ought to be pretty good. Shirley MacLaine and David Niven are attractive and agreeable people, but the script of this CinemaScopic, Metrocolored drivel reduces the pair to mere boobish blather. Various shorts and a Sylvester cartoon...
ORPHEUM: GONE WITH THE WIND is back; and Clark Gable and Vivien Leigh's mighty saga of the Ole South is to be seen at popular prices. A Civil War Centennial spectacular. Evenings...
...University of Mississippi, for example, students refer casually to classmates in the commission's pay who take notes on "subversive" conversations and to the former graduate student who gets $35 a week for removing allegedly pro-Communist literature from the library. But not until the case of Ole Miss Senior Billy Barton was the commission caught so openly trafficking in "investigations" that Mississippians grew actively alarmed...
...journalism student and managing editor of the university paper, the Mississippian, worked last summer as a reporter trainee for the Atlanta Journal. From the Georgia States' Rights Council the Mississippi commission heard ugly rumors of Barton's Atlanta activities. Augmented later by commission informers at Ole Miss, the rumors were combined into a confidential report that bumbling Commission Director Albert Jones mistakenly released. The report accused Barton of belonging to the N.A.A.C.P. (which he does not) and of leading sit-in demonstrations in Atlanta (he helped cover one for the Journal). Last week, partly because of the charges...
...schemes such as a telly-rest coach for British tourists whose feet and palates are weak: "When they gets to the place they've come to seethe Prado, say, or some old world hill town in Tuscany, they just sits on in the coach and views the 'ole thing comfortable on TV while eating honest grub, frozen up in Britain, all off plastic trays, like in aeroplanes. If they wants a bit of local atmosphere, the driver can spray about with a garlic gun." In her seventh novel, Nancy Mitford (Love in a Cold Climate, The Blessing...