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Word: caf (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...squalor in a Paris working-class district, was abandoned by her mother, and lived in a brothel run by her grandmother. A childhood disease blinded her for four years, and at 16 she gave birth to an illegitimate daughter, who died in infancy. Heartbroken, she began singing outside sidewalk cafés, lived on the coins tossed at her feet...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: France: The Sparrow & the Dilettante | 10/18/1963 | See Source »

...café owner heard and hired her. He dressed his tiny discovery in a simple black dress and changed her name from Gassion to Piaf-argot for "little sparrow." The scrawny singer with the hoarse, throbbing voice that seemed far too powerful for so small a source was an instant success. Soon all France was listening to her tender, shamelessly sentimental songs...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: France: The Sparrow & the Dilettante | 10/18/1963 | See Source »

Erik Satie was the court musician of Dadaism. He swooped around Paris in the belle époque of the 1900s with a lighted pipe in his pocket and could be seen most afternoons in the cafés with his pocket gently smoldering. He pronounced himself Pope of the "Metropolitan Church of Art of Jesus the Conductor," issued blizzards of encyclicals and excommunicated unfriendly music critics. He cheerfully orchestrated his music for airplane propellers, lottery wheels and typewriters-and occasion ally delivered it to his friends in the form of paper gliders. He also wrote a little work for piano...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Recitals: Shoot the Piano Players | 9/20/1963 | See Source »

...stars in Bicycle Ride to Nevada, an adaptation of Barnaby Conrad's novel Dangerfield, which deals with a Nobel prizewinner novelist who has slid down his 50s into alcoholism (Sept. 26). Conrad was once literary secretary to Sinclair Lewis. Edward Albee has adapted The Ballad of the Sad Café, Carson McCullers' dark-visionary study of human grotesques (Oct. 30). Paddy Chayefsky, shrewdly going for new ground every time out, has written The Passion of Josef D., a view of Joseph Stalin from 1917 to 1924, from the Revolution to the death of Lenin...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Broadway: The New Season | 8/30/1963 | See Source »

...give the white community time to show good faith on various desegregation promises. But an hour after the Guard pulled out of Cambridge, early last week, militants pressured her into agreeing to a new demonstration. Eleven Negro and white demonstrators marched downtown and tried to push into a café called Dizzyland, operated by a vociferous segregationist by the name of Robert Fehsenfeld...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Nation: A Cauldron of Hate | 7/19/1963 | See Source »

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