Word: warmth
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...fondly expected to touch off a social renaissance and lend a new warmth to the affairs of the presidency...
...they had hair on their chests." A woman trying "to take her place with (and perhaps elbowing out) some male executives may perform well for a while, but it seems not to last . . " The woman begins to realize she cannot get both the emblems of successful rivalry and the warmth and kindliness she still unconsciously wants . . [She is] vulnerable to disquieting frustrations and to emotional breakdowns...
Commenting on Santayana's aesthetic and moral values, Alken pointed out that the philosopher had a lack of fundamental warmth, but possessed a quality of complete detachment...
Victor Moore is a Puckish sort of a fellow with a twinkle in his eyes. He brings so much warmth and humor to the part of Gramps Northrup that the audience barely has time to notice the other characters or even the general story. From the time he appears until the final scene Moore has the audience completely within his grasp, making them laugh and making them cry without any effort...
...most composers, growing old means growing mellower. But for England's Ralph Vaughan Williams, 80, the process is reversed. Last week the Halle Orchestra unveiled his seventh symphony, Sinfonia Antartica, and it proved as bleak as its title. Public and press, long accustomed to warmth in Vaughan Williams, went away with a case of chills...