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

...York Times magazine section on how the State Department is run; Adolf Augustus Berle Jr. railroad adviser to Reconstruction Finance Corp., an article in the New York Times on the new securities bill; Louis McHenry Howe, Secretary to the President, a radio interview on budget-balancing. Secretary Howe con- cluded his broadcast with a half-sobbing account of how some woman had wanted to name her kittens after him but he had lost her letter-and, oh, he was so terribly upset about those poor little kittens. ¶"I love the U. S. Navy more than any other branch...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE PRESIDENCY: The Roosevelt Week: Jun. 12, 1933 | 6/12/1933 | See Source »

...greatest drummer, still shouts "Send me, man!" when he is about to launch a percussive volley. Ellington's own soft-spoken orders are a far cry from those used by white bandmasters. At rehearsals, where the routine request would be for a presto or an allegro con spirito, Ellington says. "Get off, now- Sock it!" Where symphonic conductors would call for a solemn andante the hot jazz command is, "Come on, boys, go to church...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Hot Ambassador | 6/12/1933 | See Source »

...surface of a sphere, whose plane passes through the centre of the sphere), his motto from Elizabethan John Marston ("O frantick, fond, pathetick passion! Is't possible such sensuall action should clip the wings of contemplation? . . . Fie, can our soule be underling to such a vile con-troule?") and his subject from everyday life (a deceived husband), yet his method is modern, cinematic, "stream-of-consciousness." Poet of involved psychological states, he is usually not at his best in the comparative bluntness of prose. And in modern poetry, which has come far from Robbie Burns, gutlessness...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Pathetick Passion | 5/15/1933 | See Source »

...formance. The Metropolitan was housing a ball, modeled after the balls which have occasionally been given at London's historic Covent Garden and the famed Paris Opéra. The Paris Opera House during the Second Empire was the scene into which the Metropolitan had suddenly been con- verted. Mrs. August Belmont was not in the Diamond Horseshoe where she belongs. Bewigged and betrained like the Empress Eugenie she sat enthroned on the stage beside sleek Painter Boutet de Monvel who for the occasion was Napoleon III. Some 500 New Yorkers paraded the stage as titled Parisians and visiting...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Metropolitan's Ball | 5/8/1933 | See Source »

...vest, smiles saturninely, plays with no partners, keeps his opponents at a respectful distance. Heavy of form, mellifluous of voice, he goes his own way, and has his own way: attends prizefights unknown to the mob, vents his economic theories among his industrial peers, takes no one into his con- fidence, and has many men under his domination. In practice Allied Chemical is not an alliance but a monarchy and Orlando Franklin Weber is its monarch. Studiously polite, wholly unyielding, little did Mr. Weber care last week for Mr. Gerard's futile questions. Little did he seem to care...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Weber v. All Comers | 5/8/1933 | See Source »

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