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...search all Aeschylus and Sophocles without finding a better example of hubris than Mr. Hoover's behavior in 1928. [His] . . . was not the wanton violence of the ancient tragic heroes but a smug arrogance. . . . His campaign promises ran to that excess which above all things offended the Greek temperament, which seemed above all things to invite the correcting interposition of Nemesis. . . . Compare him. for example, with Oedipus. Oedipus, like Hoover, thought very well of himself. We first see him when his country is suffering from a severe and unexpected depression. . . . He has appointed Kreon as a fact-finding commission. Kreon...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE PRESIDENCY: Hubris | 11/21/1932 | See Source »

Last week it was Jeritza's turn. She walked on to the Metropolitan stage and a great audience broke into terrific applause. She coaxed and beguiled the white-faced prophet in a voice expertly wanton. There was no scenery, no severed head on a platter but Jeritza sang-acted so vividly that people familiar with the Oscar Wilde story could easily imagine her crouching over the famed head, stroking its matted black hair, kissing the red lips...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Aid | 11/21/1932 | See Source »

...WANTON MALLY-Booth Tarkington-Donbleday, Doran ($2). Thirty-two years ago, Booth Tarkington hit the popular fancy in a vital spot with a sentimental trifle called Monsieur Beaucaire. Publishers, like children, want their entertainers to do it again. Often enough the entertainer would if he could, but too often the magic virtue has gone out of him. Wanton Mally makes pleasant enough reading, but. . . . M. de Grammont, banished from the French Court, whiles away exile in Charles II's London, soon finds a partner for his madcap follies in Jinny Wilmot, an attractively odd-looking Bright Young Person...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Beaucaire Exhumed | 11/14/1932 | See Source »

...editor of the Washington Herald} and Joseph Medill Patterson, his late brother Medill. Wrote Critic C. J. Bulliet of the Chicago Evening Post: ". . . Mrs Mc-Cormick is not bad enough for empty flattery. ... Nor is she good enough to excite the envy and the malice of the wild wanton geniuses who luxuriate like weeds m the field of art. . . . [Her] portraits are characterized by keen observation of personality, which she records with an economy of line and plane to be found only among the more experienced painters. . . . [She] is successful with her portraits...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Colonel's Lady | 6/13/1932 | See Source »

...greatest respect and deepest regret we beg to inform you that, when on February 23 at about 3 p. m., six piratic airplanes from the invading Japanese Navy were circling over Soochow, dropping bombs on an entirely unarmed and innocent civilian population, destroying lives and property alike in a wanton fashion unheard, of before, your heroic son Robert Short, flying a Boeing plane, engaged in a fight with the above planes, and after a 10-minute machine gun fire, he was shot and nose-dived to death...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CHINA-JAPAN: Again Right, Again Might | 5/2/1932 | See Source »

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