Word: coauthoring
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...that drastically. He has lowered the visibility of the actor, by making him much more of a group figure, an inter-actor-the difference, as it were, between Greek sculpture and Egyptian bas-relief. Similarly, the playwright in Brook's hands has been reduced to a sort of coauthor. Brook supplies, or imposes, a coeval text of ritualistic sounds and gestures that often competes with the playwright's lines. At its worst, this method generates intensity without illumination. At its best, it taps sources of visceral theatrical vitality...
...Whose coauthor, Reed Smoot, inspired Ogden Nash's 1930 poem "Invocation": Senator Smoot (Republican, Ut.) Is planning a ban on smut. Oh root-ti-toot for Smoot of Ut. And his reverent occiput . . . Smite, Smoot, Be rugged and rough, Smut if smitten Is front-page stuff...
...produced a 60-page article with 250 footnotes. His next piece, on search and seizure, took seven months, ran up to 125 pages with 400 footnotes. In 1964 he was co-author of a pamphlet on Modern Criminal Procedure that has since grown to 875 pages. He is also coauthor of a constitutional casebook used in 50 law schools. He has another 1,000 pages ready for a book on substantive criminal law. He also dreams of annually publishing the transcripts of perhaps 40 of the Supreme Court's most significant oral arguments-a valuable legal service now almost...
...reactionary. Homophile opinion rejects the notion that homosexuals are sick, and argues that they simply have different tastes. Kinsey had a lot to do with this, for to him all sexual pleasure was equally valid. "The only unnatural sex act," he said, "is that which you cannot perform." His coauthor, Wardell Pomeroy, also argues that homosexuality should be accepted as a fact of human existence, and claims to have known many happy, well-adjusted homosexual couples...
...Moore was ready to publish The Metabolic Response to Surgery, a slim (156-page) volume, listing Margaret R. Ball, his chief lab technician, as coauthor. Despite its unimpressive size and its coldly scientific title, the book became a surgical landmark. And it was only a beginning. What Moore calls his "big blue book" appeared in 1959. Metabolic Care of the Surgical Patient, a six-pound omnibus of 1,011 pages, would be monument enough for most men; it is a basic and irreplaceable text for modern surgeons. But Moore is still enlarging the dimensions of his monument. W. B. Saunders...