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Word: stolidness (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...popular. In pushing privatization of public services, Blair has already appropriated the Tories' home turf. A global recession or a mess in Iraq could make Labour vulnerable, but Duncan Smith does not seem the man to seize the day. His supporters talk up the virtues of his stolid decency. But as the Bill and Tony Show proves, razzmatazz still matters...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Friends In Need | 10/6/2002 | See Source »

...from local broadcasting. "As a director, I like real," he says. "Everything in my movies is real." Singaporean director Eric Khoo, whose gritty cinematic style puts him on the opposite end of the artistic spectrum, agrees that Neo is a master at getting at what lies beneath Singapore's stolid sterility. "I think a lot of Singaporeans are speechless," he says. "They don't really say much or vocalize their feelings. Then they see I Not Stupid and they're like, 'Hey, man, I'm seeing myself on the big screen...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Neo is the One | 4/1/2002 | See Source »

Last Thursday, I watched an Israeli soldier harass a Palestinian woman as she struggled desperately to cross a “checkpoint” to bring her sick baby to the hospital. The woman wept and pleaded, but the stolid soldier would not acquiesce. Oddly enough, I did not witness this encounter in the West Bank or Gaza. I watched this disturbing scene unfold in Harvard Square...

Author: By Nader R. Hasan, FOREIGN AFFAIRS | Title: Cambridge Occupied | 2/27/2002 | See Source »

...ancestor and whose family's 200-year saga became a 12-hr. ABC miniseries that broke ratings records and gave Americans of all shades a serious lesson in the horror of slavery. The event is recalled in an NBC special (this Friday) and the series' DVD release. Sprawling and stolid, Roots today evokes two vanished eras: the antebellum South, when blacks could earn dignity but not freedom; and those eight wintry nights when a whole nation could sit, rapt and appalled, before the communal...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: DVD: Roots | 1/21/2002 | See Source »

...show is not to be missed. Signac, for much of his life, was a terrific painter: tough, contemplative, highly sensitive to color and gifted in the organization of forms. Sometimes his pictures are a little pedantic: he goes at his shapes with the stolid determination of a silkworm chewing its way across a mulberry leaf. But the best of them are filled with a joy in life that Seurat, a curiously melancholy artist some of the time, couldn't top. Signac makes you feel--really feel, not just think--what it can be like to be in a world ruled...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: The Joy Of Color | 12/17/2001 | See Source »

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