Word: foregrounds
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...figures lie in the fact that, in spite of a dry academic education, he managed to feel and observe nature in his canvases. Like most painters of the period he studied in Rome. He soon discovered the trick of making his daylight luminous by having it trickle through dark foreground trees...
...scores of complaints from graduates and undergraduates about the conditions in the Engineering School bring again to the foreground a department of the University which has escaped the notice of nearly everyone in the College. The isolation began when Engineering School students were banned from the Houses and apparently it has continued during the present administration...
...bank holiday, and the NRA. California changes, and the Jacox family with it. The valley of the Sacramento River, in 1869 a region of deserted mines and straggling, undeveloped farms, and now one of the most prosperous and productive spots in the country, is the background; in the foreground are the farmers, the business men, the politicians, the farm laborers and factory workers, who made and were made by the development of the state. Beneath it all there is this theme: "Progress" results from the efforts of self-reliant, ambitious, ruthless men and women, those who keep...
While the transatlantic airline may be cooperative to an extent, President Trippe is determined that the U. S.- meaning Pan American-shall be in the foreground of the picture, not left to fight its way against entrenched foreign competition as was the case in South America where France and Germany were flying for a full year before P. A. A. got in. Nevertheless, like a wise eagle that scouts before it screams, President Trippe makes no rash predictions. He has not even committed himself to the Greenland-Iceland route, which is only one of seven possible channels across the Atlantic...
Running hot in the foreground, as would be expected, were the Hearst newshounds. To the Hearst Press the House of Morgan is the "Plunderbund," the quintessence of all that Hearst has taught "People Who Think" to regard as wicked. Not only regular newshawks but Hearst financial editors and feature writers like Damon Runyon and Ed Hill (see p. 40) were sent to Washington. The New York Journal shrieked: REVEAL MORGAN RULES INDUSTRY. In a page-wide strip of Morgan pictures in the Journal the banker's mustache was obviously painted out to give him a long, flaccid upper...