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Word: gothicized (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...which have exhibited the work of Eastern artists for years, the Whitney Museum exhibited a large loan collection of works by Chicago artists. Manhattan critics found the choice excellent, the work sound, were disappointed in the absence of local color. High spot was Grant Wood's famed American Gothic, a portrait of a sad-eyed collarless Iowa farmer & wife (TIME, Sept. 5). Other Chicago artists seemed as willing to copy New York's Reginald Marsh, Thomas Benton, Alexander Brook, as New York artists of a decade ago were to copy Picasso, Matisse, Cézanne...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Shows in Manhattan | 3/20/1933 | See Source »

Bearing down on the Union's Secretary, the 30 Green Shirts seized the minute book and ripped out its pacifist pages. Carrying their prize to the Martyrs' Memorial, the Gothic needle opposite Balliol College,* they solemnly burned the resolution against defending King & Country...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: Game Gaffers | 2/27/1933 | See Source »

...Mission Field"; Nathaniel ("Nat") Noble. Yale 1928, who told "Why I Am Going into the Ministry." With them met students from 20 colleges. They walked, skated, played squash, talked. At midnight, while many another student was roistering 1932 away, they knelt in St. Paul's elaborate Gothic chapel...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: Episcopal Plattsburg | 1/16/1933 | See Source »

...many as possible of the cheapest sort of magazines for sale in the Times Square district. He worked on the theory that the Grub Street products of an age had a distinct place in its literary history. William W. Watt, in his essay on the penny, sixpenny and shilling Gothic stories that persisted long after "Frankenstein" and "The Monk" had passed out of fashion, has proved this unanswerably...

Author: By R. M. M., | Title: BOOKENDS | 12/13/1932 | See Source »

When Dr. Beaven preached his farewell sermon, there was weeping in Lake Avenue Baptist Church. Under its new president Colgate-Rochester (product of a merger in 1928) has grown in stature. This autumn was dedicated its new $2,000,000 Gothic plant, largely the gift of John D. Rockefeller Jr. Fond of bowling as well as of chopping wood. Dr. Beaven saw to it that bowling alleys were built at the Divinity School. He is tall, well set up, grey-haired, father of three (a fourth child died). On his way to Indianapolis last week Dr. Beaven stopped...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: Mouthpiece Muffled? | 12/12/1932 | See Source »

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