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Word: saxonizes (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Right now he is intent on conquering America. Although he has made brief commando raids into the U.S., never before has he attempted to become the star here that he is almost everywhere else. "No non-Anglo Saxon performer has been able to sell music in America," he says. "I want to make a bridge between Latin music and American music that others can cross afterward. In the music business the U.S. is tops. A No. 1 song here goes all over the world. I have taken a risk in coming here, and I have put my challenge in front...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Show Business: Hail the Conquering Crooner | 9/10/1984 | See Source »

...requirements, no joy in a well-written blue book or even a good grade. The rejection came all the more easily in the obnoxious prep-school atmosphere of Harvard in those days, from the sherries, proctors and parietal halls to the ceat and tie dinners and the joyless Anglo-Saxon outline...

Author: By Richard E. Hyland, | Title: Getting the questions right | 6/7/1984 | See Source »

...Germans say that Gromyko has "an Anglo-Saxon sense of melancholy." If this is so, it may be explained by the fact that he knows that he works for men who will blame him if he permits himself to be tricked by the Americans...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Alexander Haig | 4/9/1984 | See Source »

Establishing an interdisciplinary concentration would necessitate a radical change in the administration's philosophy concerning Latin American studies, "a development which I don't see happening. Harvard has had a strong reputation as a bastion of Anglo-Saxon history with a bias in European studies," says James Brennan, a Latin American history graduate student...

Author: By Diane M. Cardwell, | Title: Uncertainty South of the Border: Latin American Studies at Harvard | 3/3/1984 | See Source »

...life of Giles Fox, a medievalist who lost his eyesight after 18 years of labor on a scholarly edition of A Treatise of Heavenly Love, a 13th century meditation on virginity. Two virgins attend him: his pretty, unworldly teen-age daughter Tibba, named for a 6th century East Saxon princess, and Louise, his frumpy, incompetent, adoring assistant. (The manuscript is imaginary, and Wilson, who has taught Anglo-Saxon at Oxford, has fun cooking up swatches of 13th century English.) Giles and Tibba live in a bare house in Islington ruled by the dictates of his morbid sensitivity. There...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Love's Fools | 12/5/1983 | See Source »

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