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Word: breaths (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
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Usage:

...Moody Moody for breath we were breath aware that the statement of her side about her aide was true. She continued. This is an original kind of movement. Among our 5000 members are many Junior Leaguers and young socialites. We make no distinction however, between race, creed, o party. We are young modern up-and-coming the country club type that are doing things in contrast to the old-style temperance reformers. Our social programs, without the use of alcoholic stimulants of course are of a varied nature such as casting canoeing hayrides beach parties, beach parties, and evening dances...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: "Temperance Gone High Hat," or Allied Youth Movement Uses New Methods Against Liquor | 5/23/1934 | See Source »

...notion that advertising is an art, he says: "If any genuine creation goes on in advertising agencies I have never seen it. . . . By and large there is no such thing as art in advertising any more than there is such a thing as advertising literature." In the same breath he admits that "advertising today, while anything but efficient, is far better designed and written than it needs to be ; obviously it costs far, far more to produce than it ought to cost. Part of the explanation, I think, lies in a private impurity of the advertising craftsman; he is more...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Pseudoculture | 5/21/1934 | See Source »

...Where Sinners Meet" is cast in the house of a millionaire on the Dover Road, England; the master of the house spends his life trying to aid the oppressed and the love lorn. American ideas of the English are surprisingly amusing, and at times highly annoying, but any breath of an English accent is as nectar to the American public and per se assures the picture of success, as is borne out by the reactions of the audience in the present case. So also any joke which the audience does not catch, goes as an extremely subtle Anglicism and draws...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Crimson Playgoer | 5/14/1934 | See Source »

...moment it crumpled up, but young Dr. Robert E. Cornish was delighted. Two other stray terriers which he had killed and revived in his University of California laboratory had died again for good and all within a few hours (TIME, March 26). But after being quite dead-heart stopped, breath stopped, eyes glazed-for four minutes on Friday, April 13, Dog No. 3 had been brought back to live day after day. This apparent miracle had been worked by means of a rocking board and injections of oxygen-saturated saline solution, liver extract, canine blood, adrenalin, gum-arabic...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Dog No. 3 (Cont'd) | 5/7/1934 | See Source »

...Depression, the fear of a Nazi Mittel Europs, the agitation of Communists and the nagging of Royalists, the national ire aroused by the scandal, may give Doumergue a year or so. But the cards are stacked against him; only let France catch its breath and a new scandal, a blunder in judgment, will find a host of Deputies ready for a new "calculation" to form a new Cabinet, and another, and another. Only when France gives her Premier the club of Dissolution will the Deputies coalesce into two great parties, one to criticize and one to lead--to formulate...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Yesterday | 5/4/1934 | See Source »

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