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Word: splendorful (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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While the President and his national security advisers went over every grim detail of the situation in the Cabinet Room, a startlingly different scene was occurring just outside on the South Lawn. Under the springtime splendor of the cherry blossoms, thousands of youngsters were enjoying the traditional Easter Monday egg rolling. The thick, lightly tinted bulletproof windows of the Cabinet Room could not block out the laughter and the sound of music...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Nation: Finally, Fire in His Eye | 4/21/1980 | See Source »

EVEN IF THE other two principals performed on Bates' level, they probably couldn't dispel the moribund mood that suffuses Nijinsky.. The photography in each scene is beautiful, but the pace drags from one opulent set to another. This procession of stupefying splendor may be deliberate--Nijinsky cries at one point that he's tired of the "endless dressing rooms, hotel rooms," and as his insanity increases, he babbles of a simple life on the farm. But this theme of Nijinsky's fatigue with a decadent life remains sketchy, and the script in general botches character development. After painstaking...

Author: By Troy Segal, | Title: Clubfooted | 4/18/1980 | See Source »

...splendor of his idea lit my imagination, and I finished his sentence. "An ex-President of their own to run! If they played dirty and used the safe, inglorious past, we'd throw the past right back at them...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: In Illinois: Imaginary Musings | 3/24/1980 | See Source »

Only a few months ago, John Connally shuttled between his campaign stops and his enormously successful fund-raising events in the splendor of a chartered Learjet. In his final days, Connally was hopping around the South in a Fairchild F27. It was a castoff from George Bush's Iowa days, the nickname "Asterisk One" only recently scratched off the fuselage...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Nation: Adieu, Big John | 3/24/1980 | See Source »

Worst hit were the chic canyons in the Santa Monica Mountains to the north and east of downtown Los Angeles. The hills are home to some of the area's wealthiest and most famous people, who live in semi-rural splendor in houses on the canyon bottoms, surrounded by oak trees and chaparral, or in hillside houses perched on stilts. Since fires-another scourge of the well-to-do Angelenos-have destroyed much of the vegetation in past years, the earth was quickly saturated by the rains. It turned into avalanches of mud that swept down the hillsides...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Environment: Nightmare in Southern California | 3/3/1980 | See Source »

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