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...Sing. Tne music of Nabucco was different from anything the earlier giants of Italian opera-Rossini, Bellini and Donizetti-had ever attempted. The choral writing was stronger, the general style more impassioned. Already Verdi was using his subsequently famous technique of writing sprightly, almost gay tunes for the grimmest situations and somehow getting away with it. Nabucco's weakness is that it has in its score little dramatic unity and that it tends to bog down in mere declamation ("It's one of those stand-up-there-and-sing operas," says Baritone Cornell MacNeil...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Pre-Vintage Verdi | 11/7/1960 | See Source »

...foreign correspondent. The opening episode involved more or less comic sailors, a Chinese fortune cooky (France Nuyen), and a plot that had everybody ducking back and forth across the Red frontier as if the Bamboo Curtain were equipped with a revolving door. Against one of the world's grimmest backdrops, the whole thing had an annoying air of schoolboys playing pranks. The show's one hope is that it may generate humor by parodying itself, and the first installment made a good start. "The Red Chinese are provoked to an absolute fury," said the crown colony...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Show Business: The New Shows | 10/10/1960 | See Source »

...Harvard's Dean of Admissions Wilbur J. Bender, the hold-down headache is "grim, grimmer, grimmest." But he says it with a certain smile. In the past five years, Ivy League colleges have been able to raise their admission standards 50%. Reason: brighter and brighter applicants. Last year two-thirds of Princeton's applicants were deemed perfectly capable of Princeton work. But only one-third could be admitted, and Princeton skimmed the richest cream. Says Director of Admission C. William Edwards: "The bottom one-third of the applicants of ten years ago wouldn't even bother...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: It Takes Good Nerves | 3/7/1960 | See Source »

...from the bustle and night life of the big cities, The Netherlands is still dotted with some of the world's dourest Calvinist communities. Among its grimmest is the former islet of Urk (pop. 5,500), a fishing village on the Zuider Zee. On Sundays, Urkers still separate their hens from the roosters, turn their paintings to the wall, read only one book (the Bible), take only one processional walk (to church). Doing anything else is sinful. For years life in Urk was pretty routine, and the town constable's daily report invariably read: "Nothing has happened." That...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE NETHERLANDS: That Rotten Dike | 7/27/1959 | See Source »

...three months in Brazil; including ten days on the Amazon-though quite comfortably on a friend's yacht. When his novel was published, one French critic flatly hailed it as "one of the masterworks of his generation." It is not that, but it is still one of the grimmest stories in some time of man's greed, his search for love, and his search for God. Readers had better take warning. Death in That Garden has its victories, but they are of the spirit. The bodies of its characters are shockingly served...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Green Hell | 5/4/1959 | See Source »

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