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Francine du Plessix Gray, 46, is a tall, blonde woman with large eyes and elegant cheekbones. The daughter of a French aristocrat and a White Russian emigré, she lived in Paris as a child, moved to the U.S. in 1941, went to a fashionable New York girls' school (Spence) and Barnard. After college she had a fling in Paris, then returned home and settled down to life in the country with her painter husband and two sons, now 15 and 16. A sporadically lapsed Catholic, Mrs. Gray demonstrated against the war in Viet Nam, was busted, got involved...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Cabin Fever? | 11/1/1976 | See Source »

...French. Stephanie's remembrance of things past flashes with literary style and wit. Remarkable siblings and sexual suitors are summoned up, often in hilarious detail, though they are mostly kept frozen at the edge of caricature by Stephanie's satiric perceptions. The author is at home in emigré salons and ancient country holdings-where the landscaping is by Le Nôtre and the new power mower is by John Deere. When the ancestral crypt, where Stephanie's father lies, gets too crowded, the family simply shifts the bones of those who had made "bad marriages...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Cabin Fever? | 11/1/1976 | See Source »

Elementalism is the recurrent mood of Still's paintings. Many abstract-expressionist canvases allude, directly or not, to landscape. No American artist, however, has so consistently dealt with epic landscape as North Dakota Emigré Still. He is not, of course, a literal landscapist (sky at top, earth below). Yet there is every reason to see in his work a splendid addition to the romantic tradition of landscape, as practiced in Europe from Turner to Van Gogh and in 19th century America by the Hudson River School: a sense of vast, brooding presences, a pantheistic immanence, flickering with energy...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Prairie Coriolanus | 2/9/1976 | See Source »

Music Hours. Most of the old emigré right-wingers, who unrealistically ranted for an overthrow of the Communist regimes, were weeded out in favor of younger and more perceptive East Europeans and Soviet defectors. In general, these staffers have tried to encourage a process of liberalization within the Communist societies. No one can evaluate to what degree the stations have affected developments in the East bloc, but they both have won a reputation for veracity and reliability inside and outside the Communist countries...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: INFORMATION: Turning Off the Radios | 3/6/1972 | See Source »

...accommodations with the mainland may work out. Historian George Taylor, for example, feels that Nixon's decision to visit China in person has compromised the U.S. bargaining position: "It would be quite sufficient to send the Secretary of State." In recent years Historian Vincent Shih, a China emigré, has been leading a massive research project on the 19th century Taiping Rebellion, a 20-year peasant uprising against domestic corruption that the Communists often cite as a forerunner of their mass movement...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: The China Scholars | 8/9/1971 | See Source »

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