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Tentatively dubbed "Pickwick," the magazine will be divided into two sections-fiction and nonfiction, Tim D. Stone '83, publisher of the Pickwick said yesterday. The fiction writings will be freelance pieces ranging from satire to free-style while the non-fiction section will comment on the use of humor as a historical social phenomenon, he added...

Author: By Julian A. Treger, | Title: New Humor Magazine | 10/28/1981 | See Source »

Members of the Pickwick plan to sell advertising and hope to solicit funds from the College to finance the publication. They also plan to charge for the magazine. "There will be no free distribution," Stone said...

Author: By Julian A. Treger, | Title: New Humor Magazine | 10/28/1981 | See Source »

since 1968?and director of the current smash London musical Cats?visited the U.S.S.R. "The director of the Gorky Theater told me that for the next six months his company would be working on the Pickwick Papers," Nunn, 41, recalls. "It emerged that such large-scale adaptations of Dickens are commonplace in Soviet theater. In a sense, that shamed me into it." The following year, inflation devoured much of the R.S.C.'s government grant (the company receives almost 40% of its approximately $12 million budget from the Arts Council). It could afford to stage only one additional new work instead...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Dickens of a Show: NICOLAS NICKELBY | 10/5/1981 | See Source »

...Before the last number of Pickwick had appeared in its green paper covers, its plump and amiable little hero with his gaiters and benevolently glittering spectacles, together with Sam Weller and his other friends, had become more than national figures-they had become a mania. Nothing like it had ever happened before. There were Pickwick chintzes, Pickwick cigars, Pickwick hats, Pickwick canes with tassels, Pickwick coats; and there were Weller corduroys and Boz cabs. There were innumerable plagiarisms, parodies, and sequels-a Pickwick Abroad, by G.W.M. Reynolds; a Posthumous Papers of the Cadger Club; a Posthumous Notes of the Pickwickian...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Spirit of Christmas Present | 12/19/1977 | See Source »

...back glass. (Ironically, D. Gottlieb & Co., Bally's chief rival, produced a model called Playboy back in 1932, when Hef was six years old.) The English, among the world's most passionate pin pushers, trace pinball's origins to the bagatelle board mentioned in Dickens' Pickwick Papers. Abe Lincoln was big on bagatelle. The sheiks of Araby are clamoring for the new machines, doubtless to keep their kids out of the casinos; King Hussein of Jordan ordered three Ballys: Wizard, Bow and Arrow, and Ro Go. Pinmania has been exploding throughout Europe, notably in France, Italy...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Living: Pinball Redux: The Hottest Games | 10/31/1977 | See Source »

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