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There's a joint exhibit of the Graphic work of George Bellows at the Boston Public Library and the Boston University School for the Arts Gallery. Bellows was an American Realist painter of the 1920's--he's probably most famous for his painting of the knockout at the Dempsey-Firpo fight. Anyway, his stuff is good...

Author: By Kathy Garrett, | Title: GALLERIES | 2/6/1975 | See Source »

...through a window, Edelin usually paused before answering questions and displayed a calm bemusement when his attorney, the court typist, or the judge stumbled on his scientific terms. He usually called the fetus and placenta "the products of conception" in describing abortion technique, and these explanations lacked the graphic polemicism that marked some prosecution testimony on the same subjects. Edelin employed his hands in controlled and graceful explication of his testimony--"sweeping" the placenta from the uterine wall in the air with the first and second fingers of his left hand and once clenching his right hand to represent...

Author: By Phillp Weiss, | Title: Odd Visages at the Edelin Trial | 2/5/1975 | See Source »

...things stand now, the new cold-type machines are under the jurisdiction of the Graphic Arts International Union, an exclusively cold-type union that last spring won from the NLRB the right to organize Harvard's cold-type typesetters. But the BTU wants its own members retrained to work on the new equipment, not laid off to make room for new GAIU employees...

Author: By Nicholas Lemann, | Title: Harvard-Union Negotiations: From Closed Doors to Public Hearings | 2/3/1975 | See Source »

...sometimes elicit action by overstating-and overheating-an issue: Daniel R. Fitzpatrick's unsubtle smog-laden cartoons helped clean up St. Louis' air back in the 1950s. It can provide a graphic perspective on this or any other time: Thomas Nast's cartoon of the U.S. contending with inflation might have been inked yesterday instead of in 1876. And the cartoon can provide a time capsule for the historian. New York Times Columnist William V. Shannon offers a sound, if wistful, prophecy when he foresees that "a hundred years from now, Herblock will be read...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Time Essay: Editorial Cartoons: Capturing the Essence | 2/3/1975 | See Source »

...publications. At its frequent best, contemporary cartooning in the U.S. steadily outshines work anywhere else in the world. No country now produces corrosive lampoons equal to Patrick Oliphant's vaudeville sketches or Paul Conrad's acidulous critiques. The competition for attention may have reduced the impact of graphic art everywhere. Yet the cartoon seems to be gaining influence. No photograph damaged Lyndon Johnson so much as David Levine's waspish drawing of L.B. J. lifting his shirt to reveal a gall bladder scar-in the shape of Viet Nam. Richard Nixon once admitted, "I wouldn...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Time Essay: Editorial Cartoons: Capturing the Essence | 2/3/1975 | See Source »

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