Word: printed
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...Fire Within played for one week in New York ten years ago, and it hasn't been back since. Minor legends have grown up about it, and many people say it is Louis Malle's finest film. Harvard Square didn't get its print in time for advance screening, so I haven't seen it, but Malle's other films, such as Murmur of the Heart and Phantom India, are so outstanding that this study of a former alcoholic contemplating suicide should be well worth seeing. Bernardo Bertolucci's Partner, featured on the same bill, is another old film being...
...first, the new ads were mostly treatises on the origins of the shortage or exhortations to conserve energy. Amoco, which last April dropped a $1 million product campaign aimed at luring vacationers into the company's gas stations, now runs print and TV "progress reports" on subjects such as "America's great natural-resources appetite." With cameras, Atlantic Richfield followed two overweight men around while they attempted to live without their cars. Each of them lost 35 pounds in three months of walking and watching their diets. Arco commercials now advise weight watchers: "Leave your...
Yves St. Laurent accented femininity even in suits tailored in men's checkered or pin-stripe fabrics. They are worn with print, tie-neck, full blouses that ease into soft yokes in back and bands at wrist or elbow. St. Laurent's beloved tunic reappeared, belted over wide pants or pleated skirts. For daytime dresses, he used every sort of pleat-box, inverted, knife, flat, broad-to gain an almost subliminal, flickering effect...
...October 25, 1962, Kennedy wrote a letter to Orvil Dryfoos, the late president and publisher of The New York Times, thanking him for agreeing not to print certain information about the confrontation with the Soviet Union over Cuba...
Federal statute and administrative rulings impose restrictions on broadcasting that do not exist for print journalism. The rationale is that those who use the limited, public air waves must be held accountable to the public interest. Without the rule, dissenting views would have no automatic access to TV. But if electronic journalists must pair every discovery of specific ills with assurances of general health, the result will be a bland journalism that serves no one's interest. "A fire is reported," says Reuven Frank, "but not the houses that didn't burn." Should network producers like Frank decide...