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Word: gazed (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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More & more U. S. concertgoers are discovering a new and painless way to enjoy music in the summer. They lie on the ground wrapped in blankets, gaze at the stars, spoon a bit, doze off, take their symphonies between nods. This detached, easygoing way of listening can be indulged on the outskirts of many of the outdoor music festivals that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Summer Festivals | 8/26/1940 | See Source »

...they spoke for most Americans, their countrymen revered the New England giants, even when age had left them like a range of extinct peaks on a receding horizon. Critic William Winter walked in the moonlight to touch the latch of Longfellow's gate. Others traveled to Concord to gaze at Emerson's woodpile. Young William Dean Howells walked up Lowell's path with palpitating heart...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Decline of the East | 8/19/1940 | See Source »

...invests this comet and, at length, the whole of his narrative, with a strange symbolic radiance. At the end, the comet masked by storm, the ship helmed by a halfwit, he is wrecked. When he comes to, he, the halfwit, a dog, a cat, sit on the sand and gaze into the gashed hull. The beach is one intricate fabric of escaping footprints. The most valuable of the animals were insured; he is glad of their liberty. Into the sack that once carried his loving serpents he has scooped the black sand, richly loaded with titanium. It will be tested...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: A Balzac for the Beasts? | 7/22/1940 | See Source »

...being revived by his creator, "Burt L. Standish" (Gilbert Patten, who last week went to Camden, Me. to finish The Return of Frank Merriwell), has become a small-town editor (Millville, U. S. A.), dauntlessly crusades against vice, still fixes all comers with "a calm and steady gaze...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People, Jun. 10, 1940 | 6/10/1940 | See Source »

That was not all George Stevens had "never submitted to public gaze." For more than 30 years he had hidden behind his beard a secret which his fellow townsmen never suspected, learned only after he was dead. Dying, he had spoken of a brother, Grant, in Akron, Ohio. Grant Stevens was notified, and the body was taken to Akron for burial. Hartford City friends, who attended the funeral and met Stevens' brother, his aunt, several nieces and nephews, made the discovery that George Stevens was a Negro...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: INDIANA: Death of a Citizen | 5/13/1940 | See Source »

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