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King arrived in the Hub yesterday morning to lead the march on Boston, which is expected to draw between 30,000 and 50,000 demonstrators. The marchers will leave the Carter Playground, Camden St. and Columbus Ave. in Roxbury, at 9:30 a.m. and walk to the Boston Common, where a mass rally is scheduled...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: King Here to Lead Mass Rights March | 4/23/1965 | See Source »

Starting from Carter Playground, at the corner of Columbus Ave. and Camden St. in Roxbury, the march will pass through Boston, stopping at schools and slums along the way. On the Common, King will speak on the "focal points of the Freedom Struggle in Boston": slum housing, municipal code enforcement, anti-poverty programs, and education. Virgil Wood, president of the Massachusetts branch of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, said yesterday that King would probably comment on the Boston School Committee...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: King Will Lead Rights March Here And Speak at Boston Common Rally | 4/14/1965 | See Source »

...calls to apologize for being late to a party, his host replies, "I didn't even know you weren't here." When he carves a girl's initials on a small tree, the tree collapses. When a little girl he admires approaches him in the playground, he gets so nervous he ties his peanut-butter sandwich in knots. When he wins a bowling trophy-a rare triumph-his name turns out to be spelled wrong. "How can we lose when we're so sincere?" he cries after losing his umpteenth baseball game. "Charlie," says Milt Caniff...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Comics: Good Grief | 4/9/1965 | See Source »

...book at the viewer. He believes Francis Bacon the greatest British painter since Gainsborough, and endorses his statement that "Art is a game by which man distracts himself." And Kitaj provides enough puns and anagrams for a month of Sundays. His paintings are a kind of litterbug's playground, scattered with the paperwork of mass communications. There are doodles drawn from Erasmus' notebooks, titles that refer to obscure Marxist-Leninist deviationists. In one corner of his An Early Europe is pasted the source photograph of neoclassical nudes that inspired the painting's composition. He will borrow an economist's catch...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Literary Collage | 2/19/1965 | See Source »

Nivola's playground has been open long enough to gauge its success. Grownups are negative. A neighborhood priest deplores the possibility of a child tumbling off a fountain. A nearby housewife thinks it may all be obscene. A local clergyman says frankly: "This art escapes me." The kids? They all seem to love it. "Swings are for babies," says one seven-year-old lad. "I'm not a baby any more...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sculpture: The Horsy Set | 2/12/1965 | See Source »

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