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Elizabeth A. Frost '85, a poetry editor for the review, said that Padan Aram was meant to be an alternative to The Advocate. "We want to take good writing and rid it of any type of pretentions that cling to projects such as these," she added...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Padan Aram | 3/5/1983 | See Source »

Mags intends to do their portrait, but the Churches paint it for us first. Gardner has been a renowned poet, the confrere of Yeats and Frost, whom he tellingly quotes. Now he is, in Fanny's words, "very gaga" and "deaf as an adder." He repeats questions that he has asked and answers questions that have not been asked. He guards his latest incoherent manuscript like a toothless lion and then flings it through the air Like a sheaf of errant snowflakes...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theater: Singing the Brahmin Blues | 2/21/1983 | See Source »

Until now, the British had lived happily with only fuzz on the air in the early morning. But when the ubiquitous David Frost, leading a group of investors and television veterans, was granted a morning franchise by the Independent Broadcasting Authority (IBA) in December 1980, the BBC would be damned if it was going to be left in the dark, and it planned a rival show...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Video: Snap! Crackle! Fluff! | 2/14/1983 | See Source »

...first hour, called Daybreak, was predominantly devoted to a rapid-fire rendition of major news stories. The next 2¼ hr., titled Good Morning Britain, presented by Frost and the sloe-eyed former Independent Television News (ITN) newscaster Anna Ford, featured interviews averaging five minutes each and lighter fare. The first week showed Frost, cheeky and condescending as usual, performing such tasks as reading bloopers from the morning papers. Frost and Ford will also be hosts on a semiregular feature called Through the Keyhole, in which a probing TV-am reporter rummages around the home of a celebrity, psychoanalyzing...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Video: Snap! Crackle! Fluff! | 2/14/1983 | See Source »

More vividly than a biography could, MacLeish's words show that unlike the tangled personal lives of so many artists, his own life was one of his works of art. To his friend Robert Frost he wrote this letter, one of the last Frost would have received...

Author: By Robert E. Monroe, | Title: Yours Ever, Archie | 2/3/1983 | See Source »

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