Word: portraited
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...shingle factory," was the belly blow of Manhattan's Armory Show. He dabbled in dada in interbellum Paris by drawing a delicate mustache and goatee on a Mona Lisa reproduction. As a surrealist masquerading under the pseudonym of Rrose Selavy (c'est la vie), he exhibited his portrait on a perfume bottle, submitted a urinal titled Fountain to a 1917 salon, where it was hidden behind a screen...
Rising Competition. Isaacs, low-spoken and affable, is very much a part of the Boston establishment: his clubs include the Somerset, the Dedham Country and Polo and the Tennis & Racquet. He lives with his wife, who is a portrait painter, and their two children on a 500-acre farm near Boston. Besides his M.I.T. duties, he serves on several boards, carefully cultivates the fund's ties with the business community. Though he feels that rising competition is one of the main problems he will face as chairman, he also sees in it a bright side for M.I.T. The entry...
...part of the preparations, Johnson issued a new family portrait, and cots were moved into a few historic White House corners to bed down other incoming relatives. But even while carpenters hammered together streetside reviewing stands for his big show, Johnson was busy laying the groundwork for postinaugural accomplishments. He sent four messages to Capitol Hill-dealing with education, immigration, foreign aid and financing disarmament negotiations. He signed his first bill of 1965, a special act authorizing him to delay his reports to Congress on the budget and the state of the economy until next week-slightly beyond the legal...
Movie Mirror, one of the dozens of film fan magazines that exist solely because there are film fans. Alongside that revelation, Movie Mirror ran a smiling cover portrait of Jack Kennedy's widow, together with her two children. Readers who bothered to turn to page 16 were rewarded with the full scoop on Jackie's new romance: "She is in love with life . . . with people . . . with her new surroundings...
...address on the Avenue Georges V is among the best in Paris, but once a customer goes down the flight of red concrete steps and through the swinging doors, another world surrounds him. Staring flintily out over the dance floor is a large, yellowed portrait of Chief Crazy Horse of the Sioux nation, and near the black bar are protruding long-handled steer horns. And on the minuscule stage are some of the most majuscule nudes in the world...