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Polar showed a genuine warmheartedness toward the little ones, most of the time.
There's a warmheartedness to go with the hard-edged style at Marika.
Nor do the players stint on the warmheartedness that makes the finale so inspiring.
There is something distinctive here - an honesty, directness, and warmheartedness - which I appreciate.
Love, continuing a series promoting warmheartedness, 45 cents, to pay the domestic rate for a two-ounce letter.
But Caldwell's special blend of tough-mindedness and warmheartedness helps explain why this book is so appealing.
It is this real phoniness - as well as Holly's warmheartedness - that the film captures so well.
He has been known to be distant and reclusive; at other times he reveals his warmheartedness and magnanimity.
Graduates remember him for his concern for their personal and academic welfare and for his warmheartedness.
If that sounds like a downer, rest assured that the film dresses these wounds with a fluffy gauze of warmheartedness.
Captivity was bewildering because Japanese military indoctrination prevented the prisoners from "accepting the Americans' warmheartedness with simple gratitude.
It imagined a culture in which a simple, folkish warmheartedness - a spontaneous generosity - would compensate for, and eventually overcome, the cruelty and oppressiveness of the economic system.
A neighbor who uses natural gas from KeySpan then offers his freezing acquaintances some shelter from the cold --albeit with a touch more condescension than warmheartedness.
And it's point of view that makes Susan Minot's "Monkeys" still the best of the Minot family stories, skillfully balancing intimacy and distance, warmheartedness and cool clarity of vision.
Perhaps it's true that Ward's book is weakened by the typically American virtues and vices he represents: warmheartedness, muddle-headedness, optimism for the future and willingness to forget all but the pleasantest bits of the past.
Even supporters of the Citgo plan in New Haven, where Mr. Bush was born, said Mr. Chávez's gesture to the Northeast appears to be more about political theater than warmheartedness.
"I think when I made 'The Ice Storm,' " he says, "I was looking for a flaw, because I was sick of being nice, doing the same kind of movies with the same warmheartedness, the same sweetness.
In my warmheartedness I thought I would go to John and get him to take one of Madame's Old Original Juju Joy Pills, that he might be as happy as I. "No sooner imagined than done.
The one person who attracted universal praise for her warmheartedness was Yueyue's rescuer, 58-year-old Chen Xianmei who was said to work as a domestic helper by day and supplement her income by collecting rubbish for recycling at night.
And audiences did cheer, again and again over the years, partly because of Miss Hayes's skill and versatility - she performed comedy and drama with equal skill - and partly because her warmheartedness always put them on her side.
In 1945 he played the legendary Blue Angel and met Mabel Mercer, the cabaret diva whose mixture of common sense and warmheartedness along with her serious investigation of popular songs as philosophical nuggets, helped shape a taste, which even by then leaned toward torch songs.
Standing in the Radisson Inn lounge with several topographical maps rolled up under his arm, Dr. Paul Schwartz, whose son was one of the pilots, said he had been touched by the "generosity and warmheartedness of individuals who don't have any connection with the pilots but as good people are always interested in helping."
Spence says this statement was interpreted at the time as a subtle criticism of Mao and the other leaders of the Cultural Revolution, who could not possibly be viewed or praised as being "open and aboveboard", "good at uniting the mass of cadres", for displaying "warmheartedness", or for modesty, prudence, or approachability.