Word: posterize
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...Hell. World War I aggravated his bitterness. He was twice invalided, was finally sent to a hospital for the shell-shocked and insane. When he got out he joined the ranks of the Dadaists, once marched in a parade wearing a death's-head and carrying a poster saying "Dada, Dada, über alles." The Dadaists were only a minor influence on his art. He admired the way the Italian futurists portrayed tension and movement. He borrowed a little from the cubists and from Paul Klee, who was so intrigued by the art of children and lunatics...
Where the Boys Are (Euterpe; Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer) is one of those pictures every intelligent moviegoer will loathe himself for liking-a corny, phony, raucous outburst of fraternity humor, sorority sex talk and housemother homilies that nevertheless warms two hours of winter with a travel-poster tanorama of fresh young faces, firm young bodies and good old Florida sunshine...
...were one answer to the poor man's status search. Signed color lithographs by Dubuffet and Braque sold for $45 and $75 at the University of Chicago show. New York's Juster Gallery offered such signed works as a Miró color etching for $90, a Picasso poster for $75. The Associated American Artists started with Raphael Soyer at $14.75, and its unsigned prints included a $19.50 Manet, a $32.50 Chagall, a $40 Renoir, a $70 Cézanne, a $190 Rouault...
...answer to Miss Furness' question seemed to be only a hesitant "Yes" at the Young Democrat party at Harkness Commons. Several signs saying "I was for Adlai but now I'm for Jack" were prominently displayed, and a black glove was hung over a campaign poster for the defeated Rep. William H. Meyer of Vermont...
...Disowned Poster. In Metropolitan France, the right and left are marshaling their forces. Jacques Soustelle, once the most passionate Gaullist of them all, is calling for a new political movement to embrace all anti-Gaullist forces. Blustering Pierre Poujade, the demagogic champion of the 1953 tax strike by shopkeepers, tried to make common cause with the former commander in chief in Algeria, General Raoul Salan, 61, who has become a virulent opponent of De Gaulle's policy and was recently ordered to stay out of Algeria. At a Paris news conference last week in the Palais d'Orsay...