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Word: interplay (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Brubeck: There has got to be interplay [among the musicians]. A jazz group is simply no good unless everyone cooperates...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: Theology & Jazz | 9/5/1955 | See Source »

Bats & Patches. But Manet's manner was even more revolutionary than his matter. He ignored the traditional chiaroscuro, the rich interplay of light and shadow, that was Giorgione's chief strength. Giorgione modeled every form with exquisite subtlety and bathed all together in soft, golden light. Manet's traditional contemporaries tried to do the same, and failed, getting a gloomy, tobacco-juice effect. But people were used to it, and found their way about in the sunless brown caves of contemporary painting as readily as bats. The "transparent atmosphere" that Manet had striven for and achieved...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Some Lunch | 5/9/1955 | See Source »

John K. Galbraith, professor of Economics, fro studies of the interplay of economics and politics in American life; Carl Kaysen, assistant professor of Economics, for studies of British policy and experience in industrial organization; Harold P. Levene, lecture on Applied Science, for studies on wave propagation; Francis P. Magoun, Jr. '16, professor of English, for studies in the technique of Finnish oral poetry...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Eleven of Faculty Get Guggenheim Grants for Study | 4/26/1955 | See Source »

Something Borrowed. Between these two ways of life, between the jostle and the ceremony, the Japanese maintain a sort of coexistence, each facet rubbing against and invisibly changing the other, but never allowed quite to melt into one pattern. This frictional interplay was going on long before the Americans arrived with their atomic bombs, occupation army and MacArthur's new constitution. For 70 remarkable years after Commodore Perry steamed into Uraga Harbor, Japan, under the enlightened reign of Emperor Meiji, force-fed itself on all the Western notions, inventions, techniques and customs it could absorb...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: JAPAN: Land of the Reluctant Sparrows | 3/14/1955 | See Source »

Stewpans & Silverware. Ho Chi Minh, dedicated Communist, is a matchless interplay of ruthlessness and guile. Before he was nine, in the central Viet Nam province of Nghean, Ho was carrying messages for his father's anti-French underground.* In 1911 he shipped out of Indo-China as a cabin boy on a French vessel, so that he could learn the foreign techniques of revolution and "come back to help my countrymen." He was not yet a Marxist, but already showed signs of an ascetic, fanatic single-mindedness...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: INDO-CHINA: Land of Compulsory Joy | 11/22/1954 | See Source »

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