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Word: glamor (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
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Usage:

...Presbyterian and in the faculty rooms of the seminary at Princeton, war was waged. Dr. Erdman was ejected from a long-held post of Student Advisor. It was even recorded that Dr. Erdman had been seen walking with Henry Sloane Coffin, Liberal leader. But somehow, war lost its glamor; and. last week, Dr. Erdman was elected Moderator of the Presbyterian General Assembly, succeeding Dr. Macartney, signifying truce. The General Assembly set to work: An overture to excind from the Church the liberally inclined Presbytery of New York was withdrawn. Resolutions for the Volstead Act, against crime, were passed. Unanimous encouragement...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Truce | 6/1/1925 | See Source »

...enter the arena of politics. Are the compensations adequate? This may be an important factor. A good lawyer can command greater fees in a single week than he would receive in an entire year in salary as a member of the President's cabinet. But there is a glamor to public life and a consciousness of being engaged in vitally important work that frequently offsets the financial disadvantages...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: COLLEGE MEN SHOULD ENTER POLITICS IN SPITE OF ALL ITS DRAWBACKS SAYS HYLAN | 5/7/1925 | See Source »

Daniel Garber is essentially a painter of countrysides−gentle and spacious landscapes touched with the glamor of an April reticence, the regretful mists of fading summer, old houses, lanes, bridges, windless leaves enchanting a forest avenue. He paints on a toned canvas with a short stroke, a small brush. Shining spots of canvas show through the paint. Notable is his portrait of a girl in blue mending her underwear out-of-doors in the ripple and shadow of sunlight and uneasy willow branches. Yet for all this iridescent preciosity, there is solidity of grouping, vigorous draughtmanship, broad effects...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Arts: Three Painters | 4/13/1925 | See Source »

...courts must struggle steadily on alone, sometimes erring but always trying to protect society from such dangers. Their worst enemies are not the criminal's friends, or false witnesses, but often the people themselves whom they are trying to safeguard, foolishly blinded as they are by the false glamor of crime...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CRIMINAL SYMPATHY | 4/6/1925 | See Source »

...select group of American young men to study at Oxford, he set up a greater claim to the gratitude of posterity than he had done by all his brilliant achievement as an empire builder in South Africa: That endowment was a modest beginning. It had nothing of the popular glamor of a Cape to Cairo project, but it was of great significance to the future progress of the world...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: "THE WORLD'S MINE OYSTER" | 2/24/1925 | See Source »

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