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Word: starks (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1980-1989
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Usage:

...incredulity at the world around him. And the interplay among Gray's script, five short clips from The Killing Fields, and Laurie Anderson's music make the film a wonderful journey through the mind of a comic who is horrified by his world. The bombing of Cambodia is a stark example of what is wrong with his country, but his sarcastic self-deprecations and caricatures of others express his dismay at his society in general...

Author: By Jennifer M. Oconnor, | Title: Diving off the Deep End | 4/11/1987 | See Source »

...Wohl and Dorothy L. Stark '88 areexceptions to the rule. The pair share a suite inAdams House...

Author: By Susanna L. Blumenthal, | Title: Radcliffe Women Win Phi Beta Kappa Keys | 4/11/1987 | See Source »

...members of the Radcliffe chapter ofthis national organization are Judith R. Barish,Maisy M. Chan, Marion C. Eakin, Deborah Tan Hung,Elizabeth Ransome, Karin M. Reinisch, Marilynn M.Richtarik, Joan Roanine, Stark, Stroud and Wohl

Author: By Susanna L. Blumenthal, | Title: Radcliffe Women Win Phi Beta Kappa Keys | 4/11/1987 | See Source »

...years before he built his first building, but he remained in thrall to Corbusier and concrete and public architecture. Tange was well- suited by temperament and history to be a Corbusian. The French master's stark, sweeping forms have the purity of Zen monoliths, and concrete was a practical material for rebuilding bombed-out, impoverished Japan. Tange's first realized design was archetypally postwar: the Hiroshima Peace Center. * Finished in stages during the early 1950s, the complex is a complete preview, in miniature,of Tange's architectural career. Nearly all of his low-rise, high-modern ideas are on display...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Design: An Elegant Sweep Toward Heaven | 3/30/1987 | See Source »

...actors sometimes find eerie pathos but often waver between lobotomized declamation and coarse accent comedy. And there is unattractive self-pity in the vision of an artist as a caged carnival act. Still, there are magic tricks, bursts of flame, ritual burials in a stage full of soil and stark tableaux echoing, or worthy of, Dali and Magritte. The words fade quickly. The images linger. W.A.H...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theater: Feast For The Eye | 3/9/1987 | See Source »

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