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Word: browing (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1940-1949
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Usage:

...direction of the ball carriers. A good part of the time our linesmen didn't have the slightest idea who the ball-carrier was: rather demoralizing. Knowing Dick Harlow's propensity for hipper-dipper deception, I shudder to think of the perplexed expressions that will cross the Tiger's brow a week from Saturday...

Author: By Topper Cook and Daily Princetonian, S | Title: HARLOW TACTICS TO PUZZLE NASSAU BULLIES, 'DAILY' SAYS | 10/28/1941 | See Source »

Resemblance to U.S. art ended in one group which turned out to be the hit of the show; eleven primitive charcoal and clay drawings on eucalyptus bark, done, not by Australia's high-brow artists, but by the paint-and-feather-clad, boomerang-throwing natives of the Australian bush. Showing animals, hunting scenes and spirits, these queer, childlike pictures were as unrealistic and imaginative as the screwball drawings of famed German Expressionist Paul Klee (TIME, Oct. 21). Some showed kangaroos and kookaburra birds drawn with their internal organs visible X-ray-wise through the skin. One, depicting a spirit...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Art from Down Under | 10/13/1941 | See Source »

...last week, spoke Manuel Avila Camacho, President of Mexico, in his opening message to Mexico's Congress. It took three hours and a half to read the speech. For two hours the President read it himself. Then he passed the bulky manuscript to his private secretary, mopped his brow, sat down to recuperate. After an hour's rest he took over once more and read...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: MEXICO: One Big Question | 9/15/1941 | See Source »

...entire program, to suggest a reorganization which would settle the increasingly louder bickering. "Sammy the Rose," who believes in the efficiency of simpleness, began by calling on all defense chiefs. After a day of calls he would return to his quiet, comfortable White House room, knit his judicial brow, write down the problems to be solved...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE PRESIDENCY: A Battle Won? | 9/8/1941 | See Source »

...than historians, yet their opinions are blindest when they talk of arts & letters. They dismiss all photography except the journalistic and the strictly scientific; they hear no difference between hot jazz and commercial swing; they dismiss the important German and Russian films of the '20s as a high-brow rage. D. H. Lawrence and Aldous Huxley are disposed of as writers who did too much reading; T. S. Eliot as an author of ultra-chichi -vers-de-société; W. H. Auden as a slick eclectic who "perhaps never wrote an original line." If there were...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Opinionated History | 6/30/1941 | See Source »

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