Word: page
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Strange Interlude, by Eugene O'Neill, is a theatrical event of fascinating and ironic magnitude. Geraldine Page acts with dazzling prismatic splendor, but the play, a 4½-hour marathon, is a dated Lost Generation relic, infused at odd moments with O'Neill's personal anguish...
...never knoo whoo put the oo in shampoo until I read the article on page fifty-tew of yoor March 8 ishoo. I won't pass judgment on phonics as a tule for teaching Jonny to read, but I must doubt that it improves his spelling. There are simply tew many exceptions to the rool-even when 'tew os get together tew say "boo." For example...
...grumbling about the size and shape of the foreign aid program-to the point that President Kennedy last December asked retired General Lucius D. Clay to head up a ten-man committee to re-examine foreign aid policies. Last week the Clay group, both in a 22-page report to Kennedy and in a longer, more detailed series of recommendations to Foreign Aid Director David Bell, made known its findings. Clay's committee offered no bold new approaches to foreign aid-but it did take a hard look at the old avenues...
...with only eight films to her credit, Miss Mimieux (pronounced Mee-mee-yer) captured the plum part of the rich, put-upon child-bride in the screen version of Lillian Hellman's Toys in the Attic, for which she receives top billing, right along with Geraldine Page and Dean Martin. Considering the fact that just three years ago she was playing Weena, the forward-thinking girl in a science-fiction fantasy, The Time Machine-and that only her role as the lovely but mentally defective girl in Light in the Piazza has won her any sort of critical recognition...
Today, at 51, Meistermann is not only a first-rank painter but also Germany's master of the stained-glass window (sec opposite page). Though such artists as Matisse and Chagall in France, as well as Abraham Rattner in the U.S. and John Piper in Britain, have helped give this once-neglected art a new prestige, Meistermann is probably the most prolific designer of all. He has done dozens of windows for clubs, chapels, offices and public buildings all over West Germany...