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Word: splendorful (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...novel is framed by this startling juxtaposition: starving dogs amid baronial splendor. When Joe decides to help Clara escape from her involuntary servitude, he steals a 1933 Mercedes from Bennett and starts driving through a landscape of blighted hopes and lives. He fears pursuit by Bennett; he is also worried that Clara's gangster friend may want her back. The last place Bennett would look, Joe decides, is at his own auto plant. But does Joe really take a job there of his own free will, as he believes? Or have the enormous forces of wealth and crime conspired...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Nightmare and the Dream | 9/22/1980 | See Source »

Dirksen's oratory succeeded in part because it functioned simultaneously as a satire upon oratory, in somewhat the way that Mae West has always been a walking satire upon sex. But all of and splendor, with his rapscallion rhapsodies and hints of the mountebank, could not conceal a small truth about what that ahead for the ancient discipline of rhetoric: an art that wanes into self-mockery is dying...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Time Essay: The Decline and Fall of Oratory | 8/18/1980 | See Source »

Americans elect a President, but they inevitably get his kin as well. Into the grave splendor of his new job the President's relatives intrude a certain amount of life's awkwardness, humiliation and sheer mess. At the very least, they bring a domestic realism that no manipulator of presidential image will ever succeed in expunging...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Nation: Private Lives in Public | 8/4/1980 | See Source »

They arrived dressed in the casual splendor they can now afford: Cheech in a T-shirt, bright green pants and flip-flops; Chong all in white, with high-top wrestling sneakers, a green translucent belt and tinted glasses. "Hey," says Cheech, gesturing at his clothes, the microphones, and the cameras and smiling knowingly, "We're not as dumb as we look...

Author: By David Frankel, | Title: Living on Spongecake | 7/18/1980 | See Source »

...would not be surpassed in America until abstract expressionism." Hartley called these works "little visions of the great intangible . . . Some will say he's gone mad-others will look and say he's looked in at the lattices of Heaven and come back with the madness of splendor...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: The Return of an Errant Native | 7/14/1980 | See Source »

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