Word: spiegel
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...African Queen is one of the most fun experiences there is--and worth seeing on the big screen in color if you've only seen it in the box up til now. Made in 1951 in England by Sam Spiegel and director John Huston, about an African river trip in 1915. C.S. Forester's book is laughable, but Bogart and Hepburn--who somehow built up one of the most exciting rapports ever on film (they really seem to understand each other in a larger way as film characters)--turn James Agee's script into something literate as well as movie...
...same agencies which bribed Chilean unions to oppose Allende. Buu's group in turn controls the "Peasant-Labor Party," which ironically lacks either peasants or laborers in the party hierarchy. Buu knows George Meany personally and after an expose this summer in the German weekly Der Spiegel, may be too vulnerable to propel himself into power...
...nakedness comes, can sex be far behind? "Most forms of nudity are not sexual," maintains Boston Psychiatrist David Spiegel, who feels that in and of itself there is nothing wrong with nudism. "There is a difference between displaying genitalia and sexual behavior. Scientists who have gone to nudist colonies have repeatedly observed that when people take off their clothes, they are less sexual." In Brooklyn, N.Y., Federal Magistrate Vincent Catoggio had another opinion. "I don't know where these people get the idea they have a constitutional right to strip naked and parade in front of other people...
...avoided sports to guard his hands. He went to work at 19 as a rehearsal pianist for Broadway shows, beginning with Funny Girl in 1964. He squeezed in night school too, graduating cum laude from Queens College. In 1968, at a Broadway party, the pianist met Producer Sam Spiegel, who chatted about a film he was planning to make from John Cheever's short story The Swimmer. Three days later Hamlisch handed him the completed theme for the movie...
Cataclysmic Worries. In their private moments, at least some of the world's leaders might be tempted to agree. Only last March an article in the West German magazine Der Spiegel quoted an aide to Willy Brandt as saying that the Chancellor "sees everything breaking apart." Brandt was said to have decided unhappily that changes of governments had become meaningless spectacles, that real power was more and more in the hands of big corporations and other interest groups. The result could be increasing extremism on both the left and the right. If this went on unchecked, Brandt was said...