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This week on the dance list is Ray Belaire, who will spoon out the jive for the Funsters at their Spring Costume Ball next Friday. Lowell's Blackout Ball Costume Party is the same night...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: News from the Houses | 5/13/1941 | See Source »

...which can be taught: it is an attitude of mind, and with old-school-tie men this was instinctive and part of their philosophy of life. These new officers will be just as brave and technically efficient, but they have been reared in an atmosphere in which the State spoon-feeds everybody from the cradle to the grave and no one feels any responsibility for his fellowmen...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: Officers without Ties | 1/27/1941 | See Source »

...Senate's champion of silver was born with a silver spoon in his mouth, of U. S. aristocracy. His mother, Catherine Key Pittman, was of the Marshalls of Virginia, and descendant of Francis Scott Key; his father, William Buckner Pittman, had as ancestors the Pittmans of North Carolina, the Buckners of Kentucky. It was a magazine cover that made a frontiersman out of wealthy, idle, spoiled young Key Pittman-perhaps the last old frontiersman to sit in the U. S. Senate. One day in 1892 (he was 20) he was leaning on his cue in a Tuscaloosa, Ala. poolroom...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: National Affairs: Turn of the Wheel | 11/18/1940 | See Source »

...those days small-town life was a popular literary theme, with two schools of approach. One stemmed from mellow Hoosier Poet James Whitcomb Riley, was ripest in the folksy novels of Hoosier Booth Tarkington. The other stemmed from the Spoon River Anthology by an Illinois lawyer and politician, Edgar Lee Masters. The ripest work of this school is Sherwood Anderson's. His meandering, mystical tales present the U. S. small town as a dimpling surface above dark fathoms of frustrated desires. He wrote of a typical female in Winesburg, Ohio: "At night she dreamed that he had bitten into...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Mellowed Mystery | 10/28/1940 | See Source »

...harbor of Domino Run, a silent fisherman took him ashore to a sod-covered hut with a pebble floor. There the young doctor saw "a very sick man coughing his soul out in the darkness. . . while a pitiably covered woman gave him cold water to sip out of a spoon...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Grenfell of Labrador | 10/21/1940 | See Source »

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