Word: magical
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...there are other courses at this pleasant hour, and some of them must even be mentioned. Eugene Rochow's only rival in masterful magic, the one, the only, the incomparable L.K. Nash bursts back from sabbatical in his all-new, slam-bang Chem count them 2. Avoid the first five rows of seats...
Professor Eugene Rochow's Black Magic 1 (Chemistry 1 in the catalogue) comes at 11--unquestionably the most engaging show since Merlin. He is rivalled, however, by another barker, Associate Professor Seymour ("And that's Rembrandt--more of him later: but now, tell you what I'm gonna do") Slive who offers this term a course on the dutch painters of the seventeenth century (Fine Arts...
...decision works no magic-in fact, the truest magic in the book lies in Author Frame's eerie knack of conveying Istina's inability to know whether she is getting better or worse. After, nine long years, Istina walks away from Cliffhaven as from the scene of a terrible accident, leaving behind her a thousand moaning others still trapped in the smashup...
...from Bullwinkle's enduring struggle against an ineptomaniac called Boris Badenov, reserving the remaining time for such continuing side features as Peabody, the intellectual dog who reshapes history, and "Fractured Fairy Tales"; Sleeping Beauty, for example, stars a facsimile of Walt Disney as the handsome prince. Withholding his magic kiss, he lets the girl sleep, builds an amusement park around her and calls it Sleeping Beautyland...
...other stories in magazines. And Salinger's tempo is slowing: since 1953, he has published only four stories, though three of these are as long as short novels. He promises "some new material soon or Soon." Despite the meagerness of his output, Salinger, at 42, has spoken with more magic, particularly to the young, than any other U.S. writer since World War II. The appearance this week of his new book, Franny and Zooey (Little, Brown; $4), actually two long, related stories that originally ran in The New Yorker, is not just a literary event but, to countless fans...