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Word: manhattanization (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...complex. Instead of battering at the gates of the white establishment, he seemed more interested in slipping under the portcullis and dancing his way up to the ramparts. After college and a stint in the Army, he was hired by the National Urban League to do welfare casework in Manhattan. He completed law school at night, moved to Washington and eventually took at stab at politics by managing Edward Kennedy's California campaign during the Senator's unsuccessful run for the Democratic presidential nomination in 1980. That led to several jobs with Kennedy, but Brown eventually left public service...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE JOYFUL POWER BROKER | 4/15/1996 | See Source »

...even as a child, Brown learned to be comfortable in the white world. Unlike most blacks of his generation, he had little firsthand experience with white racism. He went to elementary school in midtown Manhattan, to high school in suburban White Plains and to college at Middlebury in Vermont, where he was the only black in his class--and, more tellingly, the first one in the local chapter of the Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity. His frat brothers liked him so much that they defied the whites-only charter to pledge him. As a newly commissioned Army second lieutenant en route...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Dividing Line: RONALD HARMON BROWN: 1941-1996 | 4/15/1996 | See Source »

...unfortunate," Jory says, "but the serious play seems less central to New York theater." And vice versa. A play like Keely and Du can be ignored in Manhattan and still receive some 300 productions in the U.S. and abroad. That's a loss for New York theater and a tribute to Jon Jory's ATL, the most nurturing midwife of new American drama. From now on, maybe Broadway should be called "off-Louisville...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THEATER: A SUNDANCE FOR THE STAGE | 4/15/1996 | See Source »

...Spiker. The story then lurches picaresquely amid near catastrophes. Selick gives this all a bit more focus by making sure the early events, including the rhinoceros, resonate throughout the film. He also gives James (winningly played by Paul Terry) a mission: to find his dream city, a Deco-delicious Manhattan. Spider (voiced by Susan Sarandon) here has the melancholy hauteur of a Garbo femme fatale; and the Centipede, obnoxious in the book, is now a Leo Gorcey type (voiced by Richard Dreyfuss), who gets a shot at redemption by fighting a shipful of skeleton pirates straight out of Ray Harryhausen...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CINEMA: TAKING OUT THE BUGS | 4/15/1996 | See Source »

RESIGNED. WILLIAM BRATTON, 48, New York City police commissioner; in Manhattan. Bratton is credited by many for a remarkable 27% drop in crime. But Gotham gossip long suggested that his boss, Mayor Rudolph Giuliani, resented the commissioner's media profile (including a TIME cover) and independent nature. Bratton's successor, fire commissioner Howard Safir, is a Giuliani loyalist...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones Apr. 8, 1996 | 4/8/1996 | See Source »

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