Word: relaxants
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...buys a convertible or starts drinking more than he used to. Most of the middle-aged men in my set are too tired to drink that much. Anyhow, I guess that overall, TIME'S conclusion is that the thing to do with your middle age is to relax and enjoy...
...with complete aplomb and velvet voice to repeat two of the arias she had sung in her previous appearance with the orchestra. "These young singers and musicians are great-no pretensions, natural, enthusiastic, no pettiness," marveled Orchestra Manager Thomas Perry. Shrugged Baltimore-born Tyler: "I've learned to relax, and I love to sing. I can do it anywhere, any time...
Died. Jules Dubois, 56, dean of Latin America correspondents, an aggressive, often corrosive journalist who spent 19 years south of the border for the Chicago Tribune, dodging bullets, getting beaten with rifle butts, being jailed, deported and mobbed, all the while ceaselessly badgering news-shy governments to relax press censorship and winning a reputation as an implacable foe of dictatorships both right and left, which he amply documented in articles and books (Freedom Is My Beat, Fidel Castro: Rebel-Liberator or Dictator?); of a heart attack; while covering an economics conference in Bogota, Colombia (see THE WORLD...
Jehovah in Granite. Unexpectedly unearthed in 1952, nine years after her death, the manuscript was written in a secret cipher that bright little Beatrix devised herself. The cipher took six years to crack, but Potterites fearful of unsettling revelations in the Journal can relax. What it contains is an always dutiful, occasionally delightful collection of anecdote, travelogue, history and plain gossip. What it shows, in text and illustration, is how Beatrix, bored and desperate in a self-imposed isolation, beat at the bars of her confinement with nothing more than a quill pen and a palette of paints...
Plenty of students agree, even those most deeply involved. Philip Pendleton Ardery Jr., 20, a cum laude (English) Harvard senior who has resigned himself to going into the service ("When rape is inevitable, relax and enjoy it"), waxes cynical: "Students really have too good a deal. And with the tests, what you're doing is trying to decide what people have the right to die-and to do that on the basis of anything as arbitrary as intellect seems really wrong...