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Word: relishingly (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...movies do nothing of the kind. It's the post-Christmas blight. This year as much as any Hollywood saved up for December, gambling that in this foul foul year when people across the world are facing disaster like never before, American moviegoers would be bored enough to relish apocalyptic scenes of their own destruction. Anyway, Christmas was a boom. Last year at this time, around when Patty Hearst and the SLA was everybody's talk, papillon and The Sting cranked on at most picture shows and there were no new feature films to speak of except perhaps...

Author: By Richard Turner, | Title: THE SCREEN | 2/27/1975 | See Source »

...read and reported with relish the findings of the Treasury in the biggest tax cases. He bragged once that he knew within minutes what Senator William Fulbright, then chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee, had said at lunch at the Soviet embassy or what Soviet contacts had told other members of Congress at cocktail parties. He insisted that the Soviets were building Viet Nam opposition in Congress and the press. He slapped his thigh with delight when he got a report from the FBI about a prominent Republican Senator who frequented a select Chicago bordello and had some kinky sexual...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE PRESIDENCY: L.B.J., Hoover and Domestic Spying | 2/10/1975 | See Source »

Gerald Ford was acting like a real leader. He was the only man in town with a complete economic and energy plan and, whether it will ultimately be judged good or bad, he was moving ahead with relish and considerable skill...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE PRESIDENCY by HUGH SIDEY: He Has Done His Homework | 2/3/1975 | See Source »

About 1930, however, led by two men who are among the greatest photographers that America has ever produced, Edward Weston and Walker Evans, photographers turned en masse from pictorialism, began to relish the sharpness of a focussed photographic image, and became less formalistic in their work. By not understanding these men, or any that followed them, Robert Doty has essentially presented us not with the major retrospective of the 1970s which he intended, but with a history of photography that stops in 1930. Instead of advancing the history of the medium ten years, he has taken it back fifty...

Author: By Bob Ely, | Title: Flaming Out of Recognition | 1/15/1975 | See Source »

...small orchestra plays with evident relish and generally does a good job. It overpowers the singers at times, but this seems to be the fault of the cast--even when they were given ample room by the orchestra, many singers fail to take advantage of it. Katisha (Marcia Ragonetti) had one of the best voices in the company, but she was miscast if she wasn't willing to put aside some of the beauty of her voice and simply bellow out her lines. And Yum-Yum (Deborah Shaw) was clearly inadequate in places--she sang sweetly, but without sufficient strength...

Author: By Paul K. Rowe, | Title: Trouble in Titipu | 12/11/1974 | See Source »

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