Word: neglected
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Prodigies are seldom lovable, and Macaulay was no exception. As a boy he was "loudmouthed and conceited," with a visible "neglect of cleanliness." As an adult he was variously described as a "mean, whitey-looking man" and "an ugly, cross-made, splayfooted, shapeless little dumpling of a fellow." He had two qualities that make a human being a menace at any party-a phenomenal memory and inexhaustible energy. An exasperated hostess once grew so desperate that she switched the conversation to dolls, hoping to shut him up. Alas, Macaulay turned out to be an authority on them...
...performances were badly hurt by the neglect of the Bach Society management. Their priorities in printed program material for the audience are in need of revision. There was no translation of the German for the Bach; and no original text, translation, or even title published in the program for the Handel. It is far too much to ask of a performer that his audience listen in total ignorance of the words. This neglect is even more glaring in light of the orchestra's willingness to publish the original soloist's biography on an insert that could have been...
Rosovsky's denial of University neglect was challenged yesterday by Imani Kazana, who said the University "could have done a whole lot more in following up on its commitments." Kazana also said that Harvard's priorities have "clearly shifted" away from the needs of the cultural center in the past five years...
...suited to internal drama than film, if only because most of our thoughts are verbal, not visual. Prose has more flexibility, too: It can freeze a moment and describe it in detail while a camera can only capture the immediacy of continuous time. The writer can add or deliberately neglect detail at just the right instant and with greater ease. In the opening scene for example, Joyce carefully describes Dedalus's cohort, Buck Mulligan, to reinforce an antagonistic mood...
...Kilson's neglect of the existential dimension of black culture leads him to ignore the acceleration of the process of ethnicization in modern society aided by the advent of post-industrial society. This new stage of modernity demands existential response. For most blacks, this existential response is expressed by new self-definition and self-assertiveness in terms of black ethnicity; therefore any holistic and realistic analysis of black culture must not view black cultural uniqueness as a behavior to condemn, but rather as an a posteriori presupposition...