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Word: tenements (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...emigre actress renowned in Warsaw for roles in the classics. In New York City she shuffles around a decaying and almost bare tenement flat, hanging up tea bags to dry for reuse while intoning Lady Macbeth's hand- washing scene in an odd singsong with a thick Polish accent. No one will hire her, and even she can hear herself and understand...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theater: Streets Paved with Pitfalls HUNTING COCKROACHES | 3/16/1987 | See Source »

...MEMBERS OF THE PRESS corps pressed into their tenement attic-turned-playroom, the children went about their business of making potato block prints...

Author: By Jonathan M. Moses, | Title: ENDPAPER | 2/26/1987 | See Source »

...black box, bare except for a suggestion of a tenement apartment in one corner. The most conspicuous element is a red-spattered door through which someone always seems to be bursting. Among many harsh white lights that glare down on the action, the most striking is a long thin strip at the back wall that hints of someone peering in from behind. This Crime and Punishment is equally about the social injustices of the old Russia and the arrogance of the new Soviet state, and finds a continuity between them in their lack of Christian charity and love. (Lyubimov...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theater: Soviet Exile's Blazing Debut | 1/19/1987 | See Source »

...exchanges between Hines and Crystal wonderfully egged along by some excellent dialogue provided by Gary DeVore and Jimmy Huston. Contemplating a potential chemical transaction somewhere on the south side of Chicago, Hughes and Costanzo wonder whether or not to intercede when a 450SEL pulls up alongside a tenement building. Costanzo rebuts Hughes' worries about violating the probable cause rule, by saying, "In this neighborhood, a Mercedes is probable cause...

Author: By Christina V. Coletta, | Title: Running Comedy | 7/1/1986 | See Source »

...never tired of describing the circumstances of his birth--in a tenement on New York City's Lower East Side--as "the urban equivalent of being born in a log cabin." Like many other second-generation Americans, Jacob Koppel Javits was impelled by his humble origins into a life of public service that carried him from his ghetto "log cabin" to the halls of legislative power. Few made the journey with more confidence and gusto, and fewer still left behind a legacy of greater political achievement. When he died last week at 81, of complications from a degenerative nerve...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Minority Power: Jacob K. Javits: 1904-1986 | 3/17/1986 | See Source »

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