Word: sear
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Intense as they are, the beams aimed at the moon are not powerful enough to damage an aircraft flying thousands of feet above the laser gun. But the high-energy light could sear the retinas of a pilot or passenger who happened to look directly into it. So far nothing of the sort has occurred, but the FAA is taking no chances. The observatories themselves cooperate by stationing aircraft spotters outside to watch the skies whenever experiments are in progress. If a plane is seen near by, scientists hold their fire until it has passed...
...terms of vouge, yes. You always latch onto the word that is most dramatic, since Madison Avenue has trained us for that, in order to make an image sear the brain. To some degree, "black" has done that. Unfortunately, I think that white society has taken the use of the word "black" so literally that hundreds of actors who, like me, don't happen to be darkcomplexioned, and who in a T.V. commercial or on a stage, don't necessarily read "black," because there's nothing "racial" or "Negroid" (and I mean those words in the derogatory sense...
...filmed version of the play (TIME, Feb. 28, 1969), and Williamson is a man of the theater in the same way that a tiger is a creature of the jungle. This means that he transcends the celluloid and holds the audience in a dramatic vise. His eyes sear the viewer. He is not speaking to the air; he is speaking to you. As far as Williamson is concerned, elocution be damned. Poetry be damned. Meaning is all. Never has Hamlet been rendered with more clarity or more biting timeliness, and that includes Gielgud, Olivier and Burton. Shakespeare held the mirror...