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Word: byronically (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...club got into financial trouble because of the rising cost of talent and some bad concert investments, according to Byron Lord Linardos, the club's manager...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Club 47 Pressured by Huge Debt | 2/19/1968 | See Source »

...Jean-Luc Godard. In recent years, Richter's unmoving pictures have also been gaining new attention, and they are featured in an exhibit of more than 80 Richter drawings, paintings, collages and films at Manhattan's Finch College Museum. Coupled with a smaller display at the Byron Gallery, the show provides a unique opportunity to see how, as the artist puts it, "film and painting overlap with modern art. Modern art gets its ultimate meaning in movement...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Artists: Fascination with Rhythm | 2/16/1968 | See Source »

...novelist invented a character like Lord Byron, he would be set down as an opportunistic fictioneer with an eye on the bestseller list. Byron, after all, was almost too much. He was a good if not great poet; he was handsome; he could swim the Hellespont, even with a game leg; he had affairs with men as well as women including, some believe, his half sister. He was also a political rebel. When he died at 34 in Missolonghi, Greece, he was planning and financing a revolt against the Turkish oppressors...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Short Notices: Feb. 9, 1968 | 2/9/1968 | See Source »

This is the man whom Novelist Frederic Prokosch (The Seven Who Fled) tries to catch in undress. Normally an imaginative writer with considerable flair, Prokosch here employs the tired conceit that Byron left three notebooks at Missolonghi in which he reconstructed his life. As fiction, the book may appeal to those who want to see a flamboyant figure oscillate between homosexuality and heterosexuality with the nice indifference of a metronome. Prokosch uses all the four-letter words that his earlier elegance would have found quite supererogatory. Even more drearily, there is nothing new here about Byron. The hero...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Short Notices: Feb. 9, 1968 | 2/9/1968 | See Source »

...16th hole, for example, an alert cameraman caught Jack Nicklaus opening his club face on an approach shot. That, explained Commentator Byron Nelson, was for backspin. And sure enough, the ball hit beyond the pin and rolled back, back-whoops, too far. When he got to the par-five 18th hole, Nicklaus was four strokes behind, so he audaciously decided to go for an eagle. His second shot landed on an impossible rock perch at the top of a sheer drop down to the ocean. A forehanded ABC crewman was in the right place with a hand-held camera...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sportscasting: Not in the Same League | 1/26/1968 | See Source »

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