Word: trained
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...outsized trousers ("That's a lot of pants," O'Daniel crowed). His militant anti-Communism was honed by a postwar tour as military attache in Moscow and service in Korea, where he adopted the motto "Sharpen Your Bayonet." In 1954, he was asked by President Eisenhower to train the South Vietnamese army. Iron Mike became a forceful advocate of the U.S. commitment to Viet Nam, calling it "a test of our guts and our resilience...
Twenty-five years later the daughter, now grown up, meets a boy, both played again by Keller and Denner. The meeting itself is extraordinary, a moment of strangeness and promise. It occurs on board a train loaded with passengers who are the devastated victims of concentration camps. The familiarity of the scene, the desolation of the faces, is awful. Yet Lelouch challenges our usual response by having a radio play Glenn Miller's Moonlight Serenade in the background. The song throws the scene into starker relief. The passengers are revealed not as victims but as survivors being ushered into...
...offspring of the couple on the train is a young woman (Keller, naturally) of great means and unhappy passions. The man she eventually meets (Andre Dussollier) is a commercial director turned feature film maker who possesses the sort of airy style one inevitably associates with Lelouch himself. And Now My Love mostly has to do with bringing these two prospective paramours together. Lelouch relentlessly follows their separate stories until he sits his lovers down next to each other on a flight from Paris to New York. We have it from the director himself that a grand passion is born right...
American Title. Such gushy infelicities are far more common in And Now My Love than the hard enterprise of the train sequence. The movie looks, overall, like one of the hero's commercials...
...league, which argued that interns and residents were in reality receiving a postgraduate education. Thus their hours were not a matter for negotiation. Hospital officials and many older doctors who had gone through equally grueling initiations into medicine for much less money insisted that such schedules are necessary to train interns and residents and to guarantee continuity of care for the patient. Said Dr. S. David Pomrinse, director of Mount Sinai Hospital: "We try to train our doctors to watch the patient, not the clock...