Joanne elizabeth kyger biography of rory
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Brianland
Sans Sons —
a Song in Names Only
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This the most complete, up-to-date and diligently researched list of childless people anywhere on the internet or in print.
Just for fun — if you speak each name aloud or to yourself (rather than just scan) it takes you on much more of a journey. It starts in triplet, then opens up . . .
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Jesus Christ
Isaac Newton
Plato.
Mary Magdalene
Mother Teresa
Florence Nightingale;
Joan of Arc
Lawrence of Arabia
Edward the Confessor,
Betsy Ross
Rosa Parks
Bert Parks
Susan B. Anthony
Arthur C. Clarke
Ralph J. Gleason
the Dali Lama
the Pope
the Happy Hooker
Dr. Kellogg
Dr. Atkins
Dr. Seuss
Howard Hughes
Amelia Earhart
and both the Wright brothers
Oliver Wendell Holmes
John Clellon Holmes
George Bernard Shaw
Beethoven
Tchaikovsky
Mussorgsky
T.S. Elliot
W.H. Auden
H.L. Mencken
George Gershwin
George Balanchine
George Washington
Lionel Hampton
Lillian Hellman
Helen Keller
Helen Thomas
Helen Mirren
Quentin Crisp
Colin Quinn
Robin Quivers
D.H. Lawrence
E.M. Forster
J.M. Barrie
Billie Holiday
Bettye LaVette
Bettie Page
Leonardo
Michelangelo
Vincent
Salvador Dali
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Mag City
magazines & Presses
Gary Lenhart, Gregory Masters,
and Michael Scholnick
New York
Nos. 1–14 (1977–83).
Covers by David Borchard (10), Rudy Burckhardt (14), Louise Hamlin (9), Yvonne Jacquette (6), Alex Katz (14, back cover), Barry Kornbluh (2, 13), Rochelle Kraut (11), Steve Levine (4), George Schneeman (12), and Lee Sherry (3).
Mag City 10 (1980). Cover by David Borchard.
Mag City was a party in print. It was started to give a form to a literary scene that existed in the East Village, disenchanted with mainstream values. In the mid-’70s this neighborhood provided for a confluence of young artists, poets, musicians. The workshops led by Ted Berrigan and Alice Notley at The Poetry Project at St. Mark’s Church were where the third generation of New York School poets began to develop. Everyone attended the Monday and Wednesday night readings at the Project and would then convene in various bars afterward—Les Mykta, Grassroots, Orchidia, El Centro. Most of the poets worked part-time jobs or worked a few months and took off a few months. We wanted to be ready for the poem. We lived for poetry and were grateful to have discovered there were others like us out there whose priorities were complementary.
Mag City 12 (1981). Cover by George
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