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Word: accents (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1970-1979
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Usage:

...career on the lecture circuit. He would recite his marvelously serpentine and breathlessly amuck alexandrines like a tenor testing the limit of his lungs, terminating at last in a long-awaited gong of rhyme. His versifications made the bespectacled and gamesomely civilized poet something of a celebrity. His accent ("clam chowder of the East Coast-New England with a little Savannah at odd moments") was sometimes heard on radio's "Information, Please!" and the Bing Crosby and Rudy Vallee hours...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: POETS: The Monument Ogdenational | 5/31/1971 | See Source »

...didn't keep paper bags, so you had to bring your own." There were few Americans in Sydney in those days, he says, "but it was very pro-American. Australians had Hollywood visions of America as a land of big cars, big houses and beautiful people. The American accent had status here." In those days, Stone recalls, "Australians would ask in surprise, 'Why would an American come here?' " They no longer need ask. "The headlines have done it: the death of the Kennedys and Martin Luther King, the race riots, Viet Nam." In 1962, Stone...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The World: Healthier and Less Perplexed | 5/24/1971 | See Source »

...superficial level, the comparison with Metternich breaks down. As opposed to a finely carved figure, Kissinger is only of average height, slightly overweight, excessively plain, and somewhat stoop-ed. Far from beau-ideal, he is a Jewish refugee, and he speaks with a foreign accent. Despite the image of the gay divorcee, the ruminations about his social activity seem to be grounded more in journalism than in fact...

Author: By "the MEANING Of history", | Title: The Salad Days of Henry Kissinger | 5/21/1971 | See Source »

...plangent Southern accent coming through the telephone receiver was familiar. The political philosophy was downright unmistakable. "The Supreme Court should be abolished," Martha Mitchell told the Washington Evening Star last week after the court had rejected the arguments of Husband John Mitchell's Justice Department against desegregation by busing (see THE NATION). "We should extinguish the Supreme Court," she decreed. "We have no youth on the court, no Southerners, no women-just nine old men. I have never been so furious. Nine old men should not overturn the tradition of America...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People, May 3, 1971 | 5/3/1971 | See Source »

Vaillancourt has done numerous other sculptural commissions in Canada, including two for Expo 67. Politics aside, his San Francisco fountain is a most impressive piece of urban statuary, giving a much needed accent to the wide expanse of Embarcadero Plaza. But the furious Vaillancourt refuses to admit that there can be any separation of art from politics. "I am a very emotional man," he explained. "It is all the same thing." Then, prodding his middle finger upward in the direction of the speakers' platform, he added: "And if they do not like it, f- them...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: War Whoop for Freedom | 5/3/1971 | See Source »

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