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Word: spunk (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
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Usage:

...official and no underling could be found with enough spunk to fly to the Dictator and deliver this resolution. Hence it was sent by telegraph. Dictator Chiang had only one advantage. He was so far in the wilds of West China that not even a Japanese bombing plane was likely to molest him. Warily he set part of the troops in his personal pay moving slowly toward North China. That Chiang planned any serious resistance to Japan few Chinese dared hope, and he did not go with his troops last week but stayed behind in the city of Chengtu with...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CHINA: Crystallized Goodwill | 6/24/1935 | See Source »

RADICALISM HELD A PATRIOTIC NEED Meantime in Chicago the year's best-publicized academic Red scare, having run up against a combination of scorn and spunk named Robert Maynard Hutchins, ignominiously collapsed. When Drugman Charles R. Walgreen withdrew his niece from University of Chicago, clamoring that the campus was rampant with Communism, President Hutchins angrily refused to dignify his vaporings with a public investigation (TIME, April 22). Only 75 of the University's 7,500 full-time students belonged to its two pinko student organizations.* But Drugman Walgreen got his hearing anyway, before the Illinois Senate...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Midway Man | 6/24/1935 | See Source »

...weather cleared and the Government launched an actual offensive across the Struma, with heavy artillery, cavalry, infantry and machine gun units. The rebels suddenly seemed fatally short of ammunition and the Government's planes bothered them badly. Under a rain of bombs and propaganda leaflets, Macedonian spunk rapidly crumpled...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: GREECE: Wizard of Boz | 3/18/1935 | See Source »

...will no doubt get much criticism for your action, especially from those who are not respectfully inclined, but I glory in your audacity and spunk in rendering respect and honor to the office of the President...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters, Jan. 29, 1934 | 1/29/1934 | See Source »

...British Isles on foot, mostly in the teeth of wind-whipped rains. One Scottish detachment had a bagpiper who mournfully skirled the subversive "Internationale." Miners from the boarded-up coal pits of Wales, shipwrights from the silent Tyneside, locked-out weavers from the Midlands arrived with some show of spunk and morale, but the weak & weary contingent from Henry Ford's plant at Dagenham (now working at a fraction of capacity) were a disgrace to their comrades. Exhorted to parade around Hyde Park, they squatted down as soon as they reached the greensward, exerted themselves no further than to join...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: GREAT BRITAIN: Out for Mischief! | 11/7/1932 | See Source »

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