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Word: lank (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...usually averted, but a congregation in Muncie, Ind. last week found this impossible. As Sunday evening service was about to begin, 50 people sat uneasily in Madison Street Methodist Episcopal Church. Behind the pulpit stood their 55-year-old pastor. Rev. G. Lemuel Conway, tall, spare, grim-faced, with lank grey locks falling over his high forehead and gold teeth glinting between thin lips. That morning Mr. Conway had announced that Willard F. Aurand, the choirmaster, would not be present for the evening services. But Choirmaster Aurand was there. He arose and announced a hymn. Savagely Mr. Conway wheeled about...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: Muncie Gantry? | 2/6/1933 | See Source »

...people know about is one whose whole approach to engineering is based on his credo of "change" supplemented by a belief that nothing can be taken for granted, that "A man must have a certain amount of intelligent ignorance to get anywhere with progressive things." He is a tall lank man who has been found to resemble both Ichabod Crane and Abraham Lincoln. He is Charles Franklin Kettering, vice president of General Motors Corp. He invented the self-starter,* and Delco ignition and farm-lighting units,† fathered Ethyl gasoline** and Duco.‡ Since he contrived the self-starter...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: All Change! | 1/9/1933 | See Source »

Judge Ames, a lank Oklahoma City lawyer, was assistant to Attorney General Mitchell Palmer from 1919-20. From 1923-25 he was general counsel of Texas Co. Then followed two years during which he went back to his law practice before rejoining Texas Corp. He knows his A. P. I. predecessor well for Mr. Beaty was Texas Co. president in 1920-26. Judge Ames will resign from Texas Corp. to give his full time to A. P. I., presumably at a salary. Last week Mr. Boyd, while satisfied over the ousting of Mr. Beaty, announced he might yet resign within...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business & Finance: Strife at Houston | 11/28/1932 | See Source »

Nevada last week celebrated the 68th anniversary of its admission to the Union. No celebrant, however, was lank Governor Frederick Bennett Balzar, onetime railroad conductor, onetime six-shooting sheriff of Mineral County. He was in Washington, D. C. begging the R. F. C. to lend Nevada $2,000,000. Most of the banks of his arid State were at an impasse. When the loan did not come through, Governor Balzar communicated with his Lieutenant Governor Morley Griswold. As a result of that communication, Nevada's 91,000 citizens awoke from their celebration to find' 19 of their...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Glory Hole | 11/14/1932 | See Source »

Night after night in the Chi Psi fraternity house at Middlebury College, Vermont, a lank, black-haired youth used to sit at the piano, pounding out the lusty lament about the brave engineer's "farewell trip to the Promised Land." Since the piano-thumper's name was Jones, he was nicknamed "Casey." His first initials, C. S. for Charles Sherman, perpetuated the nickname from those days, 20 years ago, until he became an aviator. Then it stuck as the perfect name for a hard-bitten pilot. It helped make him a glamorous figure in the swashbuckling period...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Aeronautics: No. 13 Out | 11/7/1932 | See Source »

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