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Word: stolidness (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...ladies, and moviegoers wanted some extraordinary ordinary guy to sweep her off her pedestal and bring her down to earth. In the '30s that man was Gary Grant, a spirit as blithe as Hepburn's and a lot breezier. In the '40s and beyond, it was Spencer Tracy, the stolid, sensitive man of whom Laurence Olivier said: "I've learned more about acting from watching Tracy than in any other way." Tracy and Hepburn may have seemed intractable opposites?the anchor and the billowing sail?but a love of their craft and an eye for home truths brought them together...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Two Who Get It Right | 11/16/1981 | See Source »

Given this finding, even the most stolid anthropologist could construct a story of suspense and revelation. But Johanson and Co-Author Maitland Edey are no standard scientists. Like polished mystery writers, they trace the many searches for origins and review the rivalries that have driven such scholarly sleuths as Louis, Mary and Richard Leakey. Since Johanson is driven by the same combination of curiosity, daring and egotism, Lucy is both enlivened and marred by a lack of objectivity. Johanson is convinced that he is now in sole possession of the truth about human roots-and perhaps...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Happy Hominid | 3/16/1981 | See Source »

...wavered back and forth on the issue before climaxing with a full-blown statement of support for the National Liberation Front in October 1969). And as the politics and the society shifted over the decade, its changes, to whatever degree, were reflected in The Crimson, as the meticulous, somewhat stolid style of earlier years gave way to openness and experimentation. And for those who have noted the later careers of writers like Timothy' Crouse '68 (Boys on the Bus), Frank Rich '71 (now chief New York Times drama critic), Halberstam, J. Anthony Lukas '55 (Times Pulitzer prize-winner), Mike Kinsley...

Author: By James G. Hershberg, | Title: 14 Plympton St. | 3/7/1981 | See Source »

...stolid, jowly man whose face seems lugubriously appropriate to Israel's dire economic straits, Yigal Hurvitz, 62, who resigned as Finance Minister on Sunday, seems to thrive on political notoriety. Month after month, he had focused attention on himself in the Israeli Cabinet by challenging virtually every discretionary item of the government's planned 1981 budget. His goal: to pare public spending, hold unemployment to a tolerable 41/2% to 5% and, somehow, simultaneously bring the annual 140% inflation rate down to double digits by the end of the year. Understandably, he was not always thanked for his tightfistedness...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Yigal the Printer | 1/19/1981 | See Source »

...Metropolitan's show, imported after a successful five-month run at the British Museum, offers us a different sort of Viking: the monster chez lui, a more conscientious and stolid fellow, the rude ancestor of the modern Volvo executive. He does not even have a horned helmet -a Wagnerian embellishment on the plain iron cap he actually wore in battle. He plows his acres; he makes crude wooden boxes with crude iron tools. His wife has a comb and looks like Bjorn Borg in drag. Living in a permanent crisis economy, he believes in bullion as a hedge against...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: The Small Change of Archaeology | 10/13/1980 | See Source »

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