Word: rhythmical
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Right now, your breathing and my speech have a pattern to them and if we were outside of ourselves, listening. we could interpret something about how and why things were going as they were just from the rhythmic sense of what's you. That kind of consideration was made repeatedly, over and over and over again, as we worked on the piece. We tried also to look at what is actual, like at the simplest level, there are two men talking to each other, talking to two other people in trashcans, sometimes talking to the audience. sometimes talking to themselves...
Students learn about weather, topography and motion as determinants of design. They are required to see and draw the "rhythmic" elements of a streetscape, like doors and windows. As if that were not demanding enough, the kids must also arrange identical punch-out "buildings" so that one-then two-units stand out among the rest. This done, they may never look blindly at a street again...
...roofed village halls throughout Tanzania, angry members of the National Women's Organization stamped their feet and raised their voices in a rhythmic chant: "One man, one wife, is the proper way of life." Petitions poured in to the government, including one that warned in Swahili: "To admit a second wife is to bring poison into the home." A letter to a Dar es Salaam newspaper cautioned simply: "Polygamy will give men big heads...
...editing by T. Schoonmaker and Martin Scorsese-a masterly combination of taste, timing and theatrics. There are sequences -such as one in which John Sebastian dedicates a song to a girl who has just given birth-of lilting simplicity. There is the hysteria of The Who and the pure rhythmic orgasm of Ten Years After. They all help to make Woodstock as unique on film as it was in fact, "the mind blower," as John Sebastian puts it, "of all time...
...that included Paul Laurence Dunbar, who wrote in the Negro folk dialect of the rural South as well as standard English. The 1920s produced the movement known as the Harlem Renaissance, when Negro poetry began to turn from the classic Eng lish lyric verse of Countee Cullen to the rhythmic, blues-style poetry of Langston Hughes. Later, came Pulitzer Prize-winning Gwendolyn Brooks, Jazz Poet Ted Joans and Margaret Walker, whom some call the mother of the black poets of the '60s. These new poets began to look on themselves not as Negro but as black. Writing primarily...