Word: streamingly
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...hasn't been the best year for the white stuff, of course; team member Marco Elser recalls "making sure to stay in the course at Williams, or you'd go off into the dirt." And Eric Alberecht thought it was "distracting" to have to "ski through a stream in the middle of a race" at Cannon Mountain...
...researcher also found antibodies produced by the body to combat the fungus in the blood stream of more than half of his subjects...
...INDIVIDUAL WEIGHT of these images and arguments are magnified through Burgess's skillful weaving of the religious and the blasphemous into the tapestry of Toomey's narrative. It proceeds almost as a stream-of-consciousness, rambling through the described decades and countries, but always preserving and highlighting the important contrast between the narrator's prurience and the sanctimonious nature of orthodox religion. Burgess seems to have no purpose other than to offend with the orgies of ejaculation and sodomy that mark parts of Toomey's life; and indeed, fornication emerges throughout the novel as a sort of leitmotif underlying both...
...Wolf struggles with this question as she tries, in graceful, stirring prose, to reconstruct her youth in Nazi Germany. Writing after a brief trip back to her native town in 1971, Wolf succeeds in raising distrubing questions about the relationship of the past to the present, but the lofty, stream of consciousness style which so effectively creates the feeling of memory ultimately precludes any real clarity of vision. Although in a work such as this, a strong focus would surely ring false, the length of the book makes the lack of direction frustrating and forces the overall themes...
...past 30 years, vanguard art seems to have lost its "political" role. At the same time, although we still have lots of art - a stream of it, feeding an apparently insatiable market and providing endless opportunities for argument, exegesis and comparison - painting and sculpture have ceased to act with the urgency that was once part of the modernist contract. They change, but their changing no longer seems as important as it did in 1900, or 1930, or even 1960. When one speaks of the end of modernism, one does not invoke a sudden historical terminus. Histories do not break...