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...gave me insight into the problems of heroin users and confirmed my desire to help all I can. If there were more people in the world like Dr. Densen-Gerber to stamp out this horrible nightmare, and if all of us would work together, perhaps the world would be a better place...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters: Apr. 6, 1970 | 4/6/1970 | See Source »

...Appalling Comment. Nixon's statement is a political document, clearly aimed at placating his key constituencies in Northern suburbs and Southern cities, which will be least affected by the course he aims to take on desegregation. It bears the stamp of a top White House political aide, Harry Dent, a Southerner whom he inherited from South Carolina's Strom Thurmond. Not only did Nixon avoid consulting his Commissioner of Education, Dr. James Allen, a liberal New York Republican, but the White House also dissuaded Allen from releasing an earlier memorandum of his own, expressing the view that integration...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Civil Rights: Desegregation Yes, Integration No | 4/6/1970 | See Source »

Boots and belts, hats and handbags, shirts, shawls, coats and evening gowns, even linens, lampshades and wallpaper - all bear the stamp of the serpent. Genuine cobra can be had as a raincoat, simulated copperhead as upholstery fab ric. And women known to keel over at a photograph of a python are now swaddling themselves in the real thing...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Modern Living: For Goodness Snakes, the Serpents Have Come | 3/16/1970 | See Source »

Last week New York's Metropolitan Opera offered a new Norma production with Joan Sutherland in the title role. Hardly had she finished her first duet with Mezzo-Soprano Marilyn Horne (as Adalgisa) than the audience began to cheer and occasionally stamp and yell. The enthusiasm was fully justified. Sutherland's voice warmed toward a soaring, languorous tenderness. Horne, making one of the greatest Met debuts, showed a vocal reach and richness that exceeded nearly anybody's gasp. In Mira, O Norma, closing Act III, the two together floated along like two strings of a violin being...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Marilyn at the Met | 3/16/1970 | See Source »

...Cambridge University, the young man got carried away and fell off his chair. Then, during a TV takeoff, Prince Charles fluffed a line and adlibbed: "What the hell comes next?" With that, he got one of the evening's biggest laughs. . . . The boy's hobby was stamp collecting, and who should help him with his hobby but President Franklin D. Roosevelt. That called for a thank-you note. Last week it was discovered among the President's papers: . . . Clairvoyant Maurice Woodruff makes the following predictions in the current McCall's: Jackie Onassis will have...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People: Mar. 9, 1970 | 3/9/1970 | See Source »

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