Word: flaunts
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...country seat-actually Blenheim Palace, where much of the filming took place, marking a ruinous setback to the dignity of Britain's stately homes. Hollywood Writer-Director Andrew Stone's handiwork, billed as a black comedy, hues to the popular misnomer for any movie that dares to flaunt some inept waggery or mishandle a corpse. Secret obviously deserves a description of another color. "Green-sickly" might...
...rightness of the goal? The way to bring about this understanding is NOT to jam it down their throats. Sure, I am as idealistic as the Project workers, and feel that segregation and other injustices are wrong. But is the aim of the civil rights movement to flaunt our superior moral understanding in the face of the long-standing traditions of the South? It seems to me rather that the aim is to bring about peaceful and equal relations between whites and Negroes in the South and elsewhere in the country. This is not done by sending hundreds of young...
Fresh Face. European historians reason that every Rothschild at birth is already 150 years old, and worth several millions. From his earliest years, Guy was imbued with a sense of family loyalty and duty, heard his mother lecture: "Don't flaunt your wealth." Four of Guy's great grandparents were Rothschilds, a result of the fact that half of the family's 59 weddings in the 19th century twined Rothschild men (and money) with Rothschild women. Guy entered the bank after studying law, then got called off to war. He was one of only three...
...notion emerges clearly from the book, it is that the present system has reached a dead end. In a technological age which demands that public education be run wisely and efficiently, Conant finds that our schools are staffed with too many poorly trained teachers; that local school boards regularly flaunt minimum state standards in hiring teachers; that teachers are assigned to subjects which they have studied insufficiently or not at all; and that teachers are required to take courses in "methods" or "foundations of education" which are often worthless...
...Williams as an erotomaniac, for whom the mildest epithets are "sick" and "decadent." Yet taboo has often been the touchstone of drama. In the profoundest play of Greek tragedy, a man kills his father and marries his mother. Shakespeare and the Elizabethan drama drip with gore and violence and flaunt unnatural affections. Other critics think that Williams' choice of themes shows America to be -as angry young British Playwright John Osborne puts it -"as sex-obsessed as a medieval monastery." Yet Tennessee Williams fills foreign playhouses from Athens to Tokyo, and his current play, The Night of the Iguana...