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Word: instrumentalization (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...afternoon. A personable young man with Hollywood good looks and a funny foreign name was getting his wavy, dark-blond hair cut. The barber struck up a conversation. "So," she inquired, "what do you do?" He replied that he worked with the local symphony orchestra. "Wow!" she exclaimed. "What instrument do you play?" Actually, he said, he was the conductor -- had she ever attended a concert? "Of course not," she said, and went back to cutting his hair...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: L.A.'s Fair-Haired Finn | 3/15/1993 | See Source »

...Everyone who has an instrument can show up and play," says Assistant Senior Tutor Christoph H. Luthy. "It turns into quite a frivolous thing...

Author: By Laura M. Murray, | Title: Lowell House Defies Mold | 3/11/1993 | See Source »

Wicker, who is a fellow this semester at the Kennedy School's Barone Center on Press, Politics and Public Policy, said, "the ideas that the American press is one big instrument that is liberal is not true." He said there are more important problems facing journalists today, including gender and race bias and the trend towards sensationalism...

Author: By Seda Valcinkaya, | Title: Wicker: Press Needs Less Inhibition | 3/11/1993 | See Source »

...cleansing. The investigators reported that "daughters are often raped in front of parents, mothers in front of children, and wives in front of husbands." David Andrews, a member of the commission, who was at the time Ireland's Foreign Minister, said it was clear that rape had "become an instrument, not a by-product...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Unspeakable: Rape and War | 2/22/1993 | See Source »

THOUGH KNOWN AS THE SUPREME VIOLIN virtuoso whose personal eccentricities and wizardly playing combined to make him music's first superstar, Niccolo Paganini was also a superb guitarist. The instrument figured in all his published work during his lifetime except his magnum opus, the ferociously demanding 24 Caprices for solo violin. It seems just, then, that the guitar virtuoso ELIOT FISK has recorded his own transcriptions of the pieces (MusicMasters Classics). What amazes throughout is Fisk's ingenuity in finding the equivalents of, say, legato and ricocheted bowing on his plucked instrument, and his dexterity in executing them with such...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Short Takes: Feb. 15, 1993 | 2/15/1993 | See Source »

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