Word: oneness
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Army's Jack Frink, who edged Gerhart by 0.2 seconds in the 200-free last year, met Gerhart in the same event Saturday and went out fast. He opened a one-yard lead. stretched it to two yards, and seemed on his way to victory. But with 75 yards left, Gerhart began to come back quickly, and caught Frink with 34 yards left...
...one-meter diving ended all Army hopes Dave Silver won a convincing first, and Dick Eisenberg, with a good last dive, nipped Dan Hennebry to give Harvard eight more points and a 36-16 advantage. "After the one meter. I knew we'd have to struggle to win," Ryan admitted...
Kobick clinched the victory with a 2:05.5 win in the backstroke, and John Burris was third, After Powlison won again. Steve Baumgart with a 2:23.7, and Dave Law earned one of Harvard's rare sweeps in the breaststroke. Silver and Tom Wallace added a sweep of the three-meter diving as things began to get boring. Silver scored 325.30 points...
...focuses on the street life of Paris that Miller knew so intimately-the cafes and whorehouses, the rooftops and benches, the stores and moviehouses, the colors of the fruits and bowers. The Paris street people-the vagabonds drunkards, and sluts-appear frequently. Paris is seen from inside a pissoir one of Miller's favorite institutions. "To relieve the bladder is one of the great human joys...
...parts of the film in which Miller reads from his own work are too long. He is not a very good reader, and his literary style is so conversational that he is at his best when he retells a story he wrote in one of his books. His extempore dialogue interspersed with "doncha know" and "isn't that so." is witty and engaging. His gruff, gravelly voice, not unlike that of Huphrey Bogart, conveys a tone of ironic detachment which helps in sensing the tone of his books...