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...always be more enticing than dressed-up Hasty Puddings. Curtis E. Von Kann, director of this year's Law School Show, has put together a fast-paced farce out of a solid book and a huge but wonderful cast. The Spider People, a saga of law students in "the seamless web" of the law, is intelligible to people who know nothing about law, but stays very close to home--at Harvard Law School...

Author: By Esther Dyson, | Title: Spider People | 3/15/1969 | See Source »

...something innocent, sweet, and perhaps inaccessible about Geoffrey Chaucer. He regarded sex as one of God's blessings. His devout and lusty pilgrims wending their garrulous way to Canterbury have an easy intimacy with natural odors, natural functions and the natural affections of men and women. The seamless unity of faith and flesh creates an abyss between the 14th century and the 20th. Chau cer's people are not paralyzed by self-consciousness in the act of love. They possess none of modern man's neurasthenic haste to import trouble in paradise. They export...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: New Plays: Pilgrims' Regress | 2/14/1969 | See Source »

Aside from the problem of playing on foreign courts, the Crimson must contend with two different types of balls. At Navy, the seamless ball, which stays in the air longer, is used. Penn plays with the Craigir, which travels faster horizontally...

Author: By Bennett H. Beach, | Title: Undefeated Racquetmen To Face Navy and Penn | 2/14/1969 | See Source »

...century, its modern mold was cast about 150 years ago by Alfred Krupp (great-grandfather of the modern-day Alfried) who, at 14, inherited a nearly bankrupt little ironworks in Essen. By 1851, he had produced the world's largest cast-steel ingot, as well as the first seamless railway wheels, and was soon building a fortune out of the Industrial Revolution and the U.S. railway boom...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Blood and Irony | 12/20/1968 | See Source »

...quirky kaleidoscope of their own songs (sample title: 4 a.m. June; The Sky Was Green). The result was a little like spinning a radio dial rapidly over stations that are broadcasting Glenn Gould, Oscar Peterson and the Beatles: fascinating but somewhat dizzying. Though it has not yet achieved a seamless texture, the trio seems well on the way to Schickele's goal of "putting the good stuff from the avant-garde in a less antiseptic context...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Composers: Spike for Highbrows | 5/31/1968 | See Source »

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