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Word: yorkerism (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Most people would call it a nightmare. Lloyd Williams, the 26-year-old New Yorker who created this sequence of images, calls it a work of art. The startling thing is that a great many Americans now agree with him. After five years of lurid reports about an "underground cinema," U.S. moviegoers have caught the show. For the first time, a large audience has tuned in on experimental film and is beginning to believe what a far-out few have been saying for years: the movies are entering an era of innovation that attempts to change the language of film...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Art of Light & Lunacy: The New Underground Films | 2/17/1967 | See Source »

With no choice but to carry out the House's will, Speaker McCormack last week handpicked a committee of five Democrats and four Republicans to investigate Adam Powell. As chairman, he named Democrat Emanuel Celler, a New Yorker like Powell and chief House sponsor of every major civil rights bill since 1957. Manny Celler had at the time of the Powell floor debate denounced the whole investigation as "a kangaroo court." Now he heads...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Nation: Et tu, Manny? | 1/27/1967 | See Source »

Author Crittenden, 29, is a Phi Beta Kappa from Kansas University and has written short stories for The New Yorker and the Atlantic. His literary ancestors range from Nathanael West to Terry Southern to Nichols and May, but he has his own deadpan wit and a wildly antic...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Candide Keaton | 1/20/1967 | See Source »

...strangeness; the poet advances opaque ideas in deceptively simple language, apt to be accepted before its difficulty is recognized, as in "into the shifty sand and blank/ sky of us." I like this poem better than any of Sandy's except perhaps the Breughel poem published in the New Yorker a few weeks...

Author: By Jeremy W. Heist, | Title: The Harvard Advocate | 1/13/1967 | See Source »

Died. Gardner Rea, 74, cartoonist and contributor to The New Yorker since its founding in 1925, esteemed both for his squiggly line drawings ("Nobody will catch on when I get senile," he once said) and for his sharp gag lines, which often formed the bases of cartoons by his colleagues Charles Addams and Helen Hokinson; of a heart attack; in Brookhaven...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones: Jan. 6, 1967 | 1/6/1967 | See Source »

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