Word: smile
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...film's Billy Budd is Terence Stamp, 23, son of a Thames tugboat man. His Michelangelic good looks and country-boy smile make Billy's unaffected virtue believable where a better-known actor might have failed. As Captain Vere, Peter Ustinov shuns mawkishness in his role of naval Pilate; he reveals Vere's humanity subtly, and when Billy's wonderful and cruel farewell rings out, Vere stands destroyed by what he has had to do. Robert Ryan is the terrible Mister Claggart who presides so zealously at floggings: once, after counting out ten lashes while...
...might have been excusable if the candidate chose some other forum to set forth and defend his program. But Ted's candidacy served no expository function; he did not present the New Frontier goals to the voters of Massachusetts. Lacking imagination, humility and conviction, the youngest Kennedy substituted a smile, a slogan, and a great deal of money. The best that can be said in his defense is: smart politics. But only if one plays at thinking like a Kennedy advisor, can one excuse Teddy's surliness on the grounds that "he had nothing to gain...
Perhaps Benjamin Smith's successor should not be singled out today as a special case. The level of political debate all over this country is disturbingly low. Yet when a former Massachusetts Senator, John F. Kennedy, ran for the Presidency against a man named Nixon, he did transcend the smile-slogan level. He did present a program and an articulate, progressive vision for this country. His younger brother, however, instead of transcending swamp-politics mired in it, and finally has come to epitomize...
...conception of a United States Senator is not of a young man able to out-smile and out-handshake his opponents, who can swallow intellectual pablum spoon-fed him by a group of professors, only to gilbly regurgitate it for a radio and television audience at optimum listening hours. It is rather of a man, hopefully seasoned and matured by capable, intelligent public service, who seeks high office on the basis of his own merits, his own record, and his own ideas. Ted Kennedy certainly is not such a man. Harry F. Greene '63 Hendrik Hertzberg '65 Peter J. Wallison...
Trying to recover from hearing a New Haven policeman spout Shakespeare, the bandsmen took their seats in the court room to await trial. After the judge had tried several shoddy-looking drunks, he was forced to smile at the sight of seven Harvard students approaching the bench, all carefully dressed in three-piece suits...