Word: relaxants
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...errant father, is as resourcefully genial as a Damon Runyon Santa Claus; Donald Sutherland keeps his dimples flexed playing a policeman who demonstrates his love of literature by misquoting the opening line of Joyce's Ulysses; even veteran Simonizers Marsha Mason and Director Herbert Ross find ways to relax into the material. What the movie lacks is a compelling reason for having been made. Such are the dangers of charm. Winsome, lose some...
...doctors see a bright side to the standards. "Fighting Mother Nature is getting to be a serious problem," says Dr. George Blackburn, a renowned nutrition expert at Harvard. "I have a hospital full of anorectics." He advises people who are only a few pounds away from their goals to "relax, adjust to the new range and start having fun. There's no reason to be a size 6 or 8 when a size 10, or even 12 if you're big boned, is healthy." This advice does not go, however, for the large number of Americans...
When the 4:35 p.m. train to Lowell pulled out of North Station late last month, commuters sank back in their seats to read the paper or to relax from a day's work. Few passengers realized they were aboard the "Tax Train." But within 20 minutes, all aboard had been treated to a 20-minute summary of Massachusetts tax laws, courtesy of Internal Revenue Service and State Revenue officers...
...thus was privy, as she grew up, to glimpses of an artist that outsiders seldom saw. He was Uncle Al to her, an old gent who liked chocolate ice cream cones and miniature golf, and who used summers at the Stieglitz family compound in Lake George, N.Y., to relax and flirt innocently with young female relatives. She knew him as a character before she bumped into his legend: "It was not until 1932 or 1933, when I was ten or eleven years old, that I began to sense the deep respect in which he was held even by the artist...
With United States finally complete, Anderson will next turn her critical eye to another technological icon, television. "People don't know what to do with TV," she says. "It's used as a way to relax and be entertained, but I think Americans are insulted by the level of their TV." Characteristically, Anderson is equally leery of the cultural upholstery on British television ("It's creepy and dangerous"). But before she can begin work on her new opus, she will have to buy a television set, something she has so far resisted. "When...