Word: printed
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...must also decide what to make of Visconti's frequent use of chiaroscuro. Is there any further point, beyond mere decoration in all that flickering night light? Shadows shift and fade so often that at first I thought the print might be faulty. But no. Apparently Visconti wanted to "put Rembrandt on film." That is, he took a painterly technique and set it in motion. Intellectually this may sound fine, but it doesn't make much sense on the screen unless the director supports the tone of his narrative with it. In this case, he made me squint...
...Dery, 68, has re-emerged into print for the first time in more than five years. In a story called The Reckoning, published in the literary monthly Uj Iras (New Writing), he reluctantly comes to the conclusion that it is better to forget the revolution than to remain defiant...
...vanished American journalistic breed. The Elizabeth City Independent, which Saunders launched in 1908 on a borrowed $300, ran head-on into trouble from the start, and stayed there. Saunders offended the town, which was deeply religious, with some of the most irreverent news coverage ever committed to print. BRIDE OF THREE WEEK'S BEATS ASS OFF HUSBAND went one typical Independent headline above a story telling how a young farm wife in neighboring Camden County had bravely rescued her husband from an aggressive jackass. Even the clergy was not immune from attack. After one Baptist preacher denounced him from...
...minorities and we are in the majority. Our own breed of jackasses so far outnumber us that we long ago gave up the idea of handling them." When a twelve-year-old white girl accused a Negro of rape, Saunders rushed proof of the man's innocence into print in time to avert a lynching...
...letter asking about the truth of the Blauvelt genealogical item; Parade's answer was a flat refutation. London's huge Sunday papers, including the respectable Sunday Telegraph and Observer, promptly picked up the Parade question-and-answer as a way of getting the story into print...