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Word: blur (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...reading seems unnecessarily small. Then you notice how microscopic the print on the medicine bottle has become. How the addresses in the phone book have become exasperatingly inscrutable. And how they're just not printing paperback novels very well anymore: the text seems like one big blur...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Can You Read This? | 5/10/1999 | See Source »

...Virginia Woolf's ideas about the oppression of women and self-realization through work, Stevens entered another phase in which she merged visual and literary artistry into her paintings. "Sea of Words" is one product of her experimentation. Four faceless women are presented in skiffs, struggling against a blur of repeated words accented in gold and white lettering a metaphor for women activists who are struggling to go somewhere, to achieve some goal. According to Stevens, using words is like employing "another tool, another color." Indeed, this method works well. The combination of visual and literary elements had a phenomenal...

Author: By Angela Lin, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Two Mother's Days Out at the MFA | 5/7/1999 | See Source »

...Swing, featuring songs by '90s swing acts with one-hit-wonderish names like the Flying Neutrinos. But there's also one track, Take the "A" Train, by the Duke Ellington Orchestra. One wonders if the differences--and connections--between Duke and the new crop aren't lost in a blur of consumerism and retro-hipness...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Still Loving Him Madly | 4/26/1999 | See Source »

Black, white; man, woman; father, child: questions of identity blur in this hypnotic story of Scottish jazz trumpeter Joss Moody, who, like the real Billy Tipton, is shockingly discovered after his death to have been a woman. Told from the point of view of his grief-stricken widow Millie, his adopted son Colman and Sophie Stones, a tabloid hack hot on Moody's trail, Trumpet is about the walls between what is known and what is secret. "Every person goes about their life with a bit of perversion that is unadmittable, secretive, loathed," Kaye writes. Marred by a central inconsistency...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Trumpet By Jackie Kaye | 4/19/1999 | See Source »

...blur," the AWCHA Tournament MVP said of the most memorable goal in Harvard women's hockey history. "I just remember A.J. coming in with the puck towards the net and she put it across the crease. It was a great pass and I looked over and saw Roberts sliding across the crease so all I had to do was get a stick on it. I took the puck and put it up over the top of Roberts...

Author: By Zevi M. Gutfreund, SPECIAL TO THE CRIMSON | Title: W. Hockey Beats UNH in OT For Championship | 4/5/1999 | See Source »

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