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Word: punditizing (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...years ago. In the Senate the decision also had an effect on Senator Wagner's National Labor Relations Bill, whose fundamental premises had suddenly been given a set of question marks. Only nonpartisan who saw a silver lining for President Roosevelt & friends in the Weirton case outcome was Pundit Walter Lippmann. Said he: "What has been attempted under NRA . . . is a mixture of good and evil. . . . It was bound to break down. It has broken down. And the courts will do an historic service not only to the nation as a whole, but to recovery and reform...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: LABOR: Promises' End | 3/11/1935 | See Source »

...spite of the opinion of Pundit William Lyon Phelps who hailed Author Roy Cory Hutchinson's first book (The Answering Glory) as "a shout of joy," U. S. readers with an eye for good writing were beginning to watch Author Hutchinson closely, called him far & away better than his name-fellow, Arthur Stuart Menteth Hutchinson (If Winter Comes). After reading his second, The Unforgotten Prisoner, even level-headed critics called him better than Galsworthy. But last week, after reading his third, Author Hutchinson's praisers modified their mounting applause, called him better than the late William J. Locke...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Insomniac Hero | 3/4/1935 | See Source »

...campaign in its behalf. "It looks to me," said she to a women's Conference on the Cause & Cure of War in Washington last fortnight, "as though we were about to take another step toward doing away with war." Positive of a Court victory in the Senate, Pundit Frank Kent gallantly accorded "some of the credit ... to Mrs. Roosevelt...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE CONGRESS: Up Senate, Down Court | 2/11/1935 | See Source »

...Walter Winchell's column, some had appeared in the Boston Evening Transcript, some in Harriet Monroe's Poetry: A Magazine oj Verse. To conceive of the tremendous industry that could turn out 25,000 sonnets, says Mr. Untermeyer, "one must think of the author as a pundit, an immured octogenarian, devoting all his hours to the fashioning and perfecting of his flexible models." But Dr. Moore is only 31, spends his days teaching at Harvard Medical School, researching in neuropsychiatry at the Boston City and Boston Psychopathic Hospitals, carrying on private practice, fathering two sons. A semiprofessional swimmer...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Doctor's Output | 2/11/1935 | See Source »

...extensively reworked by a U. S. hack for a pittance and Gabriel Over the White House became startlingly prophetic of the New Deal's early endeavors. The new President was so impressed that he had the film made from the book shown twice at the White House and Pundit Walter Lippmann composed a high-minded sermon on its lack of intrinsic importance. Now, without benefit of a rewrite-man, the Briton who learned his political realism under David Lloyd George has tried it again, in another fuzzy apocalyptic novel of the future...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Fuzzy Future | 1/21/1935 | See Source »

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