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Word: sunlights (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Coffee Pot cook produced a study of morning sunlight filtering through a great tree in Central Park which a metropolitan art dealer snapped up. The ex-broker found peace in sculpture, modeled a striking bust of a jut-jawed, middle-aged tycoon. The secretary painted a smiling portrait of Anna Eleanor Roosevelt on an old piece of bristol board. It has been purchased for the White House. The high-school boy drew automobiles. It got him a job as sports cartoonist on a Manhattan newspaper. The cripple turned out some slashing caricatures of the Four Marx Brothers which Warner Bros...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Adults at Study | 9/17/1934 | See Source »

...never poked his nose outside Westminster, the City and Fleet Street. ... We have led the world, many a time before today. . . . We can lead it again. We headed the procession when it took . . . the wrong turning. ... It is for us to find the way out again, into the sunlight...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Priestley Perturbations | 8/13/1934 | See Source »

...good look at his literary generation, admits "it was an easy, quick, adventurous age, good to be young in; and yet on coming out of it one feels a sense of relief, as on coming out of a closed, smoky room too full of talk and people into the sunlight of the winter streets...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Lost Generation | 6/4/1934 | See Source »

...rage of activity and smothers other vital processes. The acute form of the disease is explosive. Policemen cells apparently on regular duty suddenly become riotous. Lymph and marrow overwork furiously. Acute cases die within three months whereas the chronic forms last from six months to four or five years. Sunlight, x-ray treatments, arsenic dosage may prolong the leucemic's life. Cause of the disease is undetermined. Some physicians think that it is the result of a tumor in the marrow. Leucemia is by no means rare. During 1932 it took 2,794 lives in the U. S. That...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Leucemia | 5/21/1934 | See Source »

...spring zephyrs ruffle delightfully the surface of the Charles and the dresses of the doxies along its banks? But no more could these aphrodisiacs of spring enliven him, for now they aroused within him a palling cloud of defensive inactivity, which made the light breeze seem vicious, the caressing sunlight tropical, and even the grass like brittle spicules of rock...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Student Vagabond | 4/25/1934 | See Source »

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