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The New Yorker, July 3, 1965 P. 32 PROFILE of Dr. Marie Nyswander, a psychiatrist and psychoanalyst who, under a program of research instituted by the Rockefeller Institute, isconducting research ...
Douglas Preston writes about a new explanation for the fate of the Dyatlov party, a group of Soviet cross-country skiers, whose deaths, in 1959, in the freezing mountains of the Urals, have become ...
One of the new strategies is to acknowledge climate change but to put polluters in charge of remedying it. Aronoff describes a 2018 proposal by Royal Dutch Shell, billed as a pathway to two ...
Dalloway,” or even “To the Lighthouse.” In fact, it comes from “Unknown Man No. 89,” a 1977 novel by Elmore Leonard. The man ...
He was nothing and nobody, and nobody cared, and he thought that everyone was watching him, that even I was watching him.
A seventy-million-dollar renovation beautifully presents the museum’s non-Western art—even if doubts remain about whether all ...
Mafalda,” the comic strip in which she appeared, was published in Argentina from 1964 to 1973, and remained a cultural ...
Voices Lost in Snow” ran in The New Yorker in 1976, though I discovered it almost two decades later, in a discarded library ...
My Sharon is dealing with “the Change,” which seems also to be on Paley’s mind in “My Father.” (“We should probably begin at ...
Brodkey wrote “The State of Grace” in his early twenties, a sweeping act of pure genius that took him only forty-five minutes ...
Told in fragments, the book spans Alyan’s itinerant upbringing, in Kuwait, Beirut, and elsewhere, and her life as an adult in ...
The demise of the English paper will end a long intellectual tradition, but it’s also an opportunity to reëxamine the purpose ...
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