Word: unfoldings
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...moving slowly in the darkness. The man-figure tippy-toes over to the woman-figure, who keeps darting away and eluding him at the last moment. Several years later, the dancers get together while the "haunting" sounds continue, and eventually their white shadows begin to blur their outlines and unfold in streaks of light that look like tungsten trickles. And this goes...
THEATER has a unique capacity to touch our best-protected secrets. When it does not try to fight, cajole, or debate us--but rather to beguile us with the notion that it has an existence separate from our own--then we will watch the circumstance unfold with sight unmarred by vested interests. And having wrought its image clearly in our eye, the play can then trust to our restless minds to draw the inescapable analogies to our own experience. The Caravan Theater has tapped this power with extraordinary effectiveness in the past, and they will no doubt...
...maintaining the superfine balance between the three characters, present a formidable challenge to the director and his cast. If John Greenwood's production does not always succeed in this, the attempt reveals intelligence and sensitivity. Greenwood has rightly kept movement and gesture to a minimum, letting the drama unfold through the words themselves. Unavoidably, the burden of interpretation rests squarely on nuances of intonation and expression. Occasionally, these nuances go awry...
...difficult era, we have tried to discharge our journalistic responsibilities fairly-without ever hesitating to make judgments. We expect to stay with the story as the postmortems, the further legal proceedings and the answers to still undeveloped questions unfold. But we are not sorry to leave most of Watergate behind and move on to a new phase in American history and thus, inevitably, in journalism. Our minds and plans have already begun to shift to the future and the opportunity to focus on many subjects that have had to be pushed aside over these many months. As TIME...
...Nixon's perplexed and frustrated strategists hit on no new grand strategy for fighting impeachment in the House. Publicly, White House aides refused to discuss the subject. Said Warren: "Our strategy will become clear as events unfold in maybe five days, ten days or 20 days." Added Communications Director Ken W. Clawson: "Did Eisenhower tell the Germans when he was going to invade Normandy?" Privately, aides planned a soft-sell campaign to discredit the charges by contending that they are too flimsy and general to be considered grounds for impeachment-the same arguments voiced by Nixon supporters...