Word: seenes
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Baby Died." Defense Psychiatrist David Johnston testified that Antonia was not capable of murdering her child, and then showed the 47-minute film of one of the hypnosis sessions that had led to his conclusion. In it, Johnston is seen putting her into a trance, then taking her back to the night of the baby's death. She had been given a sedative, she says, and as Dr. Johnston snaps his fingers she remembers being wakened. "The baby cry again," she says. "The baby needs to be feeded, and got to get the bottle. The baby was crying...
...lanky at 5 ft. 11 in. and 160 Ibs., Spitz has been a water baby since he was two, when his father, a steel-company executive, was transferred from Modesto, Calif., to Honolulu. "We went to Waikiki every day," recalls Mark's mother. 'You should have seen that little boy dash into the ocean. He'd run like he was trying to commit suicide." After four years in Hawaii, the Spitz family moved to Sacramento, Calif., where Mark got his first competitive instruction at a local Y.M.C.A. By the time he was ten, the youngster held...
...bristling night on the town. "It's strictly for evening wear, for theater and discotheques," says Dr. Allan Lazar, 30-year-old Manhattan periodontist, describing his new mustache and goatee. Sybil Burton Christopher reckons that at least half of the popular Pancho Villa or Zapata mustaches seen in her Manhattan discotheque, Arthur, are phonies. Narcotics agents regard hoked-up hairiness as an invaluable aid in infiltrating hippie drug circles, and servicemen feel an added hank of hair increases chances that the weekend pass will be completed. According to one mother, her son and all his friends at Fort Sill...
...swirling nonsense nebulae of France's Jean Francois Bory (see cut), concrete poetry has some of the appeal of pop posters, and the same sort of esthetic justification. But the movement as a whole raises an important question: Did Joyce Kilmer miss all that much by never having seen a poem lovely as a t ttt rrrrr rrrrrrr eeeeeeeee...
...from the larger craft, may emphasize plot action but only at the expense of the eerie and important continuity of technology that dominates most of the film. 2001 is, among other things, a slow-paced intricate stab at creating an aesthetic from natural and material things we have never seen before: the film's opening, "The Dawn of Man," takes place four million years ago (with a cast composed solely of australopithecine, tapirs, and a pre-historic leopard), and a quick cut takes us past the history of man into the future...