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Word: villainizing (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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What O'Leary achieves with actions, super-freshman Hanes does with words. Not only does he have the egocentric villain character nailed ("Natalie, I believe I've found myself overqualified for life as we know it."), but the kid knows how to play off the audience like the great comic actors. Hanes is raw material, and when he goes into the Elvis-takeoff tune "Stud" (my favorite song in the show, complete with background choreograpy in the finest Motown tradition), you'll know he doesn't spend his Saturday nights watching "Mannix...

Author: By Bill Scheft, | Title: The Smell of the Crowd | 2/24/1979 | See Source »

...villain of a book is seldom an inanimate object. But in this case, the Berlin Wall qualifies for the role. If Curtis Cate's richly detailed, gripping history has a villain, however, it lacks a hero. For the author, a longtime commentator on European affairs and a biographer of George Sand and Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, strongly implies that the Wall would never have been built if the Western Allies had shown a little more sophistication and a little less fear...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: History Without a Hero | 2/19/1979 | See Source »

...idea has great possibilities, but Truscott writes with the subtlety of a rifle butt. His villain, Charles Sherrill Hedges, commandant of cadets, is a pathologically ambitious martinet who tries to cover up the killing; his plan, an elaborate tangle of implausibility, is to make it look as if the academy's superintendent had ordered the coverup. That done, Hedges can take over as the supe of what cadets call "Woo Poo." But Hedges reck ons without Ry Slaight, a second-class man who stumbles upon the truth and then besieges it for nearly 500 pages, like Grant trying...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Murder at Woo Poo | 2/19/1979 | See Source »

...urged the admissions personnel to discuss minority issues with "a lot of courage and candor," adding that many people avoided facing questions about "what our goals for minorities should be for fear of looking like a racist, a villain...

Author: By William E. Mckibben, | Title: Expert Says 'Bakke' Had Little Effect | 2/10/1979 | See Source »

...loud, "might well cause irreversible brain damage." But he risks it. One writer's offenses against God and good English, pretty much the same thing to Mitch, are carefully totted up: seven "comma faults," three "failures" of subject-verb agreement, two unpardonable cases of "purple fustian." The villain is hoist by his own "demonstrable inanities." To quote is to destroy-so goes Mitch's modus operandi...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Glassboro, N.J.: A Voice Crying in the Wilderness | 1/29/1979 | See Source »

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