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Although Hitler tried to portray his early years as serene, Langer postulated from Hitler's character and writings that his father must have been a drunken, menacing brute. (Interviews in the 1950s with neighbors of the Hitler family substantiated this professional hunch, Historian Waite reports.) Because children view the universe in the light of their home experience, Hitler probably saw the whole world as "extremely dangerous, uncertain and unjust." This was the origin of his sense of powerlessness...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Behavior: The Two Hitlers | 10/2/1972 | See Source »

...describing Solzhenitsyn's efforts to publish his work at home and his attempts to avoid pseudo-legal personal penalties for having been published abroad. This job is the only one that they tackle successfully. They also make an inadequate effort to analyze Solzhenitsyn's literary achievement and to portray his personality...

Author: By Dwight Cramer, | Title: Solzhenitsyn: A Biography | 9/28/1972 | See Source »

...worth getting angry about is the implication behind it: that movies made for black audiences have to be, or can easily be, so casually and contemptuously awful. Such movies are not even made with the same care or craft as the 90-minute features cranked out for television. They portray all black men as diddy-boppers or street-corner hustlers, all white men as drooling, craven criminals, and women of any complexion as whimpering sex machines. They lack the energy and dignity of good action melodrama. Super Fly and movies like it demean the audiences they are made...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Racial Slur | 9/11/1972 | See Source »

...heavy hand of alist realism". Rather there is careful attention to realistic detail, as in the first long shot of the old country house--with its peeling paint, creaking doors and evanescent charm. Even the interjection of pictures of denuded forest lands and starving children are in context. They portray the stark contrasts between the idle gentry and the destitute peasantry which underly Chekhov's sense of a passing...

Author: By Barbara A. Slavin, | Title: A Surprising Soviet Chekhov | 8/4/1972 | See Source »

...nominee's advisers see his specific proposals as part of an attempt to respond to the same kind of discontent and desire for change that Alabama Governor George Wallace so bitingly articulated but did not satisfy. Thus, a basic thrust of the McGovern campaign will be to portray Nixon as the champion of bigness-citing, for example, the Administration's coziness with ITT officials-and as the most prominent representative of a political system that voters want to change. With the Administration depicted as deceptive, secretive and unwilling to "level with the people," the McGovern advisers feel that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: POLITICS: St. George Prepares to Face the Dragon | 7/24/1972 | See Source »

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