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

...also official that Edward Price Bell, dean of the foreign staff of the Chicago Daily News, had "sold" the idea, first to Prime Minister King, then to Mr. MacDonald. Among journalists, Edward Price Bell is a Pundit, not only a writer and interpreter but also a molder, a creator of news. He is heir to the dream of the late, great Victor Fremont Lawson, builder of the Chicago Daily News, who 30 years ago conceived a worldwide foreign service which was to be "the handmaiden of state craft." Men who worked abroad for Journalist Lawson had to be diplomatists...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Bell's At It Again | 6/24/1929 | See Source »

...side issue, yet socially important, was the way in which the entire Lindbergh story emphasized the new "power of the press." As a molder of opinion on vital political issues, the newspapers may have almost ceased to function, but the development of press associations, of syndicates and of special writers has enabled them to take any outstanding event and bring thou- sands upon thousands of words upon it before the eyes of virtually every literate U. S. inhabitant. Who has not seen the Lindbergh photographs? Who, asked to whom the nicknames "Slim," "Lucky," apply, would hesitate for an answer...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: HEROES: Fadeout | 6/27/1927 | See Source »

...unique delegation arrived in Manhattan last week aboard the Carmania. They were eight British workingmen. One was a patternmaker, one a boilermaker, one a blacksmith, one a toolmaker, one a molder, one an ironworker, one fitter, one a "machine man." They came to the U. S. for four weeks on invitation of the London Daily Mail, one of Lord Rothermere's papers. They are eight actual workers, not labor leaders, sent to examine working conditions, wages and industrial methods in the U. S. The newspaper is paying all their traveling expenses, paying their wives ( who remain at home...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: LABOR: Eight Visitors | 3/22/1926 | See Source »

Next day, the press of the Nation affirmed, quite correctly, that the reward could not have been better bestowed. Tenor Hayes is an artist of the first rank. Born in Curryville, Ga., his mother a freed slave, he worked as a stove-molder, sang in a church choir, was encouraged to train his voice. At first, because of the incredible prejudice against his race, he received scant attention in the U. S. He went to Europe, toured England triumphantly, sang before King George in Buckingham Palace (TIME, Oct. 8, 1923), conquered hostile audiences in Germany, returned...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Negro Hayes | 4/20/1925 | See Source »

There follows a list of the officers enrolled this fall: Captain J. H. Balmat, Lieut. R. F. Batchelder, Lieut. J. F. Battley, Major C. R. Baxter, Lieut. L. D. Booth, Lieut. J. B. Carroll, Captain D. H. Hanes, Colonel Samuel Hof, Captain H. W. Keller, Lieut. J. C. Molder, Ensign M. A. Norcrosse, Ensign A. P. Randolph, Lieut. G. H. Shattuck, Lieut. C. M. Simpson, and Lieut. J. E. Wymond. The second year officers are: Lieut. R. V. Adams, Lieut. J. D. Boyle, Major S. S. Creighton, Lieut. L. A. Elliott, Captain E. D. Ellis, Captain G. C. Irwin, Lieut...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: BUSINESS SCHOOL GETS FIFTEEN OFFICERS FROM ARMY AND NAVY | 10/3/1924 | See Source »

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