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...apparently on orders from an official representing the all-powerful ideological section of the Central Committee. It is anybody's guess when Look Out for Your Faces will be performed again in Russia. Last week Moscow was buzzing with speculation on which of the show's skits, poems and songs had offended the Central Committee. Among the possibilities: > In one skit, performers hold up letters spelling out A luna kamila, a palindrome meaning "The moon has vanished." An official, hypersensitive about the Soviet failure to get a man on the moon first, might have seen this...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Soviet Union: Poet on a String | 3/9/1970 | See Source »

...most prominent motif currently is the heart, an image loaded with visual and literary connotations. In its repetition of the image and its lyric use of warm, watery colors, Rome Hearts can be read as a kind of tone poem. Not surprisingly, perhaps, Dine has also published a volume of his poetry. Like his paintings, his poems are personal, full of discovery, the outpourings of an artist who seems to need to share his joy with the world. "I want to express myself with anything I can get my hands on," he says. "Whether it is words or shoes...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Poet of the Personal | 3/9/1970 | See Source »

...speak this morning as we pause to honor Christopher Columbus, the admiral of the ocean sea, and the accomplishments and contributions of Americans of Italian descent to our nation, the positive benefits of those who followed Columbus to America. It was best to begin this presentation with that famous poem for it emphasizes the theme that will run through this entire speech this morning-one of perseverance...

Author: By Lawrence S. Dicara, | Title: Sail On! Sail On! Sail On and On! | 3/5/1970 | See Source »

...opened with a poem and I think I'll close with a few lines of sing-song verse I have written myself. I hope the message comes through...

Author: By Lawrence S. Dicara, | Title: Sail On! Sail On! Sail On and On! | 3/5/1970 | See Source »

...even the closest scrutiny may leave us cold. Something as small as a stuffed nose may keep us from enjoying a trip to the museum. For irrelevant reasons, the impact of a whole gallery of paintings may elude us. We can envision ourselves, under certain circumstances, mistaking a bad poem for a much better one. Yet I doubt sincerely whether the most severe stultification of the senses would prevent one from protesting an indisputably bad meal...

Author: By Marcei. Proust, | Title: One Entrecote To Go, Easy On The | 3/4/1970 | See Source »

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