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...restraining traditions in structure as well as content, jarring the scene's academic milieu, always reluctant to be flippant with the established forms of the classics. Kuzminsky's work has been published in numerous books and journals around the world, and his life and work were illuminated in the Autumn '76 issue of the French magazine Parler, which dedicated that volume to his creative struggles and accomplishments. He also co-edited Apollo, a six-hundred-page anthology of contemporary Russian literature and art, as well as contributing to a local small press journal called Thicket. After three and a half...

Author: By Hedwig Gorski, | Title: TEXAS POETS | 11/18/1980 | See Source »

...city will be bare then - not like now, when autumn continues to languish on the trees, and Lafayette Square is still bright yellow with chrysanthemums Come January the city will be humming again, and this present quiescence for gotten. Miserable normality will be restored, and the country will glower at it creation...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Nation: A Place to Hate and Love | 11/10/1980 | See Source »

...foundering stickwomen, headed for a successful season and a playoff berth just a few weeks ago, now own a 4-6-3 mark and will put their championship hopes to rest for another Autumn...

Author: By Bruce Shoenfield, | Title: Bulldogs' Bark Frightens Stickwomen | 11/1/1980 | See Source »

...American Society of Travel Agents', a convention Marcos deemed crucial to Philippines' flagging economy and image. Although ASTA members had received a warning last month signed by the most visible anti-Marcos group--the April 6 Liberation Movement, which claimed credit for many of the bombings during the autumn--Marcos gave impassioned personal guarantees of safety to the travel agents. These importunations prevailed enough to draw 3500 delegates to Manila, which had taken two years to prepare for the event. The dictator wrapped the visitors in an imposing cloak of security, giving an impression of impenetrability. The delegates packed...

Author: By Laurence S. Grafstein, | Title: Storm Warning | 10/31/1980 | See Source »

WHEN ROBERT LOWELL arrived at Harvard as a freshman in the autumn of 1935, he brought a weighty burden with him. Surrounded by reminders of his family's immense wealth and power (his uncle, Abbott Lawrence Lowell, was then president of the University, and construction of Lowell House was underway), and further intimidated by the monolithic literary reputations of the preceding generations of Lowells, the young student found his burning aspirations dampened...

Author: By Sarah L. Mcvitv, | Title: Of Lowells and Their Passions | 10/28/1980 | See Source »

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