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...surface. With these maps scientists can find out how the concentration of elements from place to place at the sun's surface varies and how the concentration changes over time. Data this accurate can't be collected from the earth's surface because the atmosphere blocks the ultra-violet rays used for the observations...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: University Takes Look at the Sun | 10/27/1967 | See Source »

Love of Puttering. Throughout his career, Attlee remained as egalitarian as the Britain he hoped to build. His wife Violet often chauffeured him about in the family Hillman on his political rounds. He wore frayed clothes, smoked a little black pipe and cultivated the Englishman's love of puttering about a garden. The son of a lawyer, he attended Oxford and was a staunch Tory until he visited a London slum. The squalor turned the young lawyer into a social worker and socialist. When the Labor Party split in 1935 over the issue of pacifism, Attlee, a World...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: World: The Egalitarian Example | 10/20/1967 | See Source »

...star of the film is clearly the chorus; and the whole production seems to be organized around the chorus as a focal core. They sing beautifully together and are right on pitch. Violet Teass wrote the fine choral chants. And Henry Hallstrom's extensive musical score, played by 21 members of the National Symphony Orchestra, is unusually distinguished and carefully synchronized. No less expert is the chorus' dancing of Eleanor Struppa's choreography. Executed with precision, the dancing adapts most effectively the modern Martha Graham stylistic approach...

Author: By Caldwell Titcomb, | Title: 'ORESTEIA' MOVIE COMING | 7/25/1967 | See Source »

...were budding, and the floriated rhetoric of Senate Minority Leader Everett McKinley Dirksen, 71, was in full bloom. "It is as sprightly as the daffodil, as colorful as the rose, as resolute as the zinnia, as delicate as the carnation, as aggressive as the petunia, as ubiquitous as the violet and as stately as the snapdragon," hymned Evin his Hammond Organ voice. "It beguiles the senses and ennobles the spirit of man." With that he continued his perennial crusade by presenting to the Senate his annual resolution asking that the marigold be designated the U.S. national flower...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People: Apr. 28, 1967 | 4/28/1967 | See Source »

...became fascinated by "the signalization of the railways. I thought how dramatic this 'signalization' was, how necessary a part of our century." Ever since, he has been putting together odds and ends of old army tanks, trucks and planes to form cryptic beacons, panels of flashing green, violet and red aircraft-landing lights, needles that sing with an electronic Zorba whine...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Techniques: Luminal Music | 4/28/1967 | See Source »

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