Word: tend
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...pale at the idea of a 110 minutes cutting of the three-and-a-half hour play, will approve of Welles's condensation. His use of panning camera motion animates the long dialogue sections he retained from the play's late acts, particularly the soliloquies which on stage tend to be unbearably static. This vividness and motion more than compensate for the confused nature of the early scenes, in which Welles's attempt to speed through preliminaries makes a prior reading of the play advisable...
Surrey worked in government for 13 years before he went to the Law School, and has had little difficulty adapting to the difference in climate. "I'm not sure there is such a thing as an academic man or a government official," Surrey commented. "Lawyers tend to fit into both atmospheres...
Pale and still easily exhausted, Democratic Governor John Connally last week tried to tend to the business of Texas from a hospital bed in Dallas' Parkland Memorial Hospital. His recovery from the bullet that ripped through his chest, wrist and thigh has been rapid. His punctured lung has re-inflated and is healing beyond all original expectations. Each day he is up and about for a bit longer. Half of the stainless steel wires used to stitch together his torn thigh have been removed. Doctors predicted that the Governor would leave the hospital in a week or so, should...
Even without a hunger strike, East Germans are barely getting enough to eat. Their faces tend to look grey because of the lack of citrus and other fresh fruits (the average consumer gets fewer than five oranges a year). With the exception of bread, meal, some baked products and margarine, most foods are rationed. In Saxony, for example, each person's theoretical weekly allowance is one-half pound of meat, two eggs, one-half pound of hard sausage, and about six ounces of butter. The favorite strategy for buying up unrationed goods in short supply is to dispatch every...
...crime: robbing a bank at gunpoint. The punishment: 3½ years in prison, which is a gentler sentence than he would probably have received if he were found guilty by a U.S. military court. Pentagon spokesmen testifying before a Senate subcommittee reported that U.S. servicemen tried in foreign courts tend to get mild sentences. Japan has even built a special prison for U.S. prisoners, with much more comfortable accommodations than those provided for Japanese convicts...