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

Ambassadors Phillips and Suvich are both of the polished and professional type, cool to all but their closest friends. Both are considered by tailors to be utterly faultless in their attire. By competent if not brilliant work, both had plodded successfully along the road of "career men." For Signore Suvich, however, the appointment was a negative promotion. For Mr. Phillips it was a positive professional advancement...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: FOREIGN SERVICE: Double Shift | 7/13/1936 | See Source »

EYELESS IN GAZA-Aldous Huxley- Harper ($2.50). The literary career of Aldous Huxley has been marked with many guideposts. It has not been his fault if critics have been unable to trace the stages of his development. At the age of 41 he has produced some 24 books, including novels, plays, poems, anthologies, travel books, essays, charting his progression from an accomplished satirist to a troubled moralist, from a contented mocker at contemporary society to an earnest preacher to it. Tall (over 6 ft.), extremely thin, bookish, Aldous Huxley gave up his plan to be a doctor at 17, when...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Mill Slaves | 7/13/1936 | See Source »

...industrial affairs. Reporters in the Senate Press Gallery knew it fortnight ago when they saw the baleful glare Miner Lewis cast down on West Virginia's snaggle-toothed Rush Holt as that daring young man filibustered the substitute Guffey Coal Control Bill and possibly his own public career into the discard. Newshawks at the White House knew it when John Lewis stomped grimly into the President's office next day. And correspondents in the press box at the Democratic Convention last week knew it when John Lewis, hospitably received by the Resolutions Committee, was presumably permitted...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: LABOR: Storm Over Steel | 7/6/1936 | See Source »

...with the decor of a successful mine superintendent's home is that of John L. Lewis' neat colonial house in Alexandria, Va. There in his lovely garden he now receives the flower of legislative society. Perhaps the only mannerism which still betrays his early career as a mine mule-skinner is his habit of hitching up his coat sleeves before he carves the roast. His conversation is straightforward, if sometimes redundant, and he is quite capable of conveying, if not originating, an acceptable image. Sonorously he speaks of the democratic necessity, in these troubled political times...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: LABOR: Storm Over Steel | 7/6/1936 | See Source »

...grey during the weeks and months of British-Italian threats and bickering over Ethiopia. Suavely Captain Eden, with the complete aplomb which he gained at Eton, Oxford and in the trenches, told the House that the pro-Ethiopian, pro-League and anti-Italian policy upon which his whole career and promotion to Foreign Secretary was based, is now no more. Said the Foreign Secretary sonorously: "His Majesty's Government, after mature consideration on advice which I, as Foreign Secretary, thought it my duty to give them, have come to the conclusion that there is no longer any utility...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE LEAGUE: Capitulation | 6/29/1936 | See Source »

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