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

...trousers, an old sweater and a grey hat pulled far down on his grooved and sunburned face, he potters about the North Hollywood bungalow where he lives with his wife, son, and four-year-old daughter Carolyn, who sprawls about in a specially monstrous sandbox. The role of football wizard is, on the whole, superior to any other in professional sport. Coaches get higher salaries than any other professionals except a few baseball players. Their earning capacity is not determined by their age. They work only in the autumn and mostly in the afternoon. If they are successful, they...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Football: Mid-season | 11/14/1932 | See Source »

With football's post-War inflation, foothall coaches reached their present pinnacle of importance. There are now some 3,000 well-paid, highly respected football coaches in the U. S. The principal disadvantage in the profession of football wizard is its uncertainty. If a team stops winning its games consistently, its coach stops receiving a wizard's salary. There are a few football coaches in the U. S. who have overcome this handicap sufficiently to make their reputations for wizardry, like Howard Jones's, secure...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Football: Mid-season | 11/14/1932 | See Source »

...authentic background. Scott had a shrewd publisher in famed Constable, but they quarreled and Scott set up his old schoolmate James Ballantyne and his brother in a rival house. Soon Scott began publishing anonymously the successful "Waverley Novels." Even the Prince Regent could not induce "The Wizard of the North" to drop his anonymity-until Ballantyne & Co. failed. Scott went back to Constable. In 1825 Constable too crashed, leaving Scott more than $600,000 in the red. Friends, admirers, bankers offered to help. But Sir Walter Scott, bankrupt, widowed and ill, pitched in and for six years worked...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: Scott Centenary | 10/3/1932 | See Source »

...haired Maurice McLoughlin was obviously a "comet." Sad, sly little Henri Cochet, with rings under his eyes, is a "wizard." Tilden, tall, thin, dramatic, made an almost funnypaper contrast with William Johnston, short, thin, efficient: they were "Big Bill" and "Little Bill." Last week the galleries at Wimbledon, after watching some tennis as great as Wimbledon ever saw, felt around for a nickname for its exponent, a lanky, lazy-looking California boy who had come over to play in his first "world championship...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: At Wimbledon | 7/11/1932 | See Source »

During the last half-century, while the band-wagon of scientific progress has been rambling along, accumulating its balloon-tires, free-wheeling, and Wizard Controls, one little-known industry has been loitering by the wayside, gathering its hibiscus in shameful dalliance. These delinquents are the men who make Keys-to-the-City. Other locksmiths have been hard at work, stiffening bank-vaults against the professional marauder, fashioning Yale locks against the casual inebriate, while municipal keys have continued in the mold of the mediaeval rathaus...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: AVE ATQUE VALE | 2/5/1932 | See Source »

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