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Word: afoul (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
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Usage:

...talent was timely rather than timeless; moreover, in his native Germany, Fallada and his symbolic "Little Man" pinned their hopes on Hitler, and it turned out to be a luckless choice for both. Fallada's books were pronounced "undesirable" by the Nazis, and in 1944 he ran afoul of the law and was jailed. Though specific charges were never pressed against him, he shared a cell for six months with two insane criminals...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Story of a Damnation | 12/22/1952 | See Source »

Fish had no sooner announced than he ran afoul of New York's nomination-filing law. Purposely rigged against new parties, the law states that a candidate must get five thousand signatures in each of the state's counties to get on the ballot. Fish did fine in New York City, but he had to give up in the wilds of the Adirondack mountain counties, where it is hard enough to find five thousand inhabitants, let alone disgruntled Republicans. In Connecticut, however, Miss Vivian Kellems met the filing requirements and began sniping at both major candidates in her weekly radio...

Author: By Milton S. Gwirtzman, | Title: Birth of a Party II | 10/3/1952 | See Source »

What They Did. Their chief crime was that they ran afoul of Maurice Thorez, boss of the French Reds, who went to Russia in 1950 to recuperate from a stroke. Thorez felt at home in Russia: a deserter from the French army, he had spent the war years there while his underground comrades in France risked their lives fighting the Nazis (and laying the groundwork for the Reds' postwar power). Marty and Tillon resented Comrade Thorez's absentee leadership. Marty called Thorez and his wife, Jeannette Vermeersch, "resisters from Moscow." At a meeting of the French politburo, Tillon...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: FRANCE: Trouble for Old Heroes | 9/29/1952 | See Source »

...CRIMSON editor Sack had a neat flair for high drama and low humor, too often constricted here within the inelastic form of a news story. He runs afoul of no such limitations in The Butcher. Sack's book splits roughly into halves. The first half outlines the expedition's halting progress to the base of the mountain. It is very funny. He starts from the labor pains of the expedition, when it was busy accumulating radios which refused to work and storing breakfast food--eagerly pressed into the hands of the climbers by an enterprising cereal manufacturer--in the living...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Bookshelf | 9/22/1952 | See Source »

...results, not arguments, to convince the National Assembly, which reconvenes next month, that his government can keep its promise to balance the French budget without raising taxes. At first, Pinay did remarkably well (TIME, April 21 et seq.), but by last week his "save-the-franc" campaign had fallen afoul of man and nature. Foot-and-mouth disease, raging in central France, had ravaged cattle herds, sent beef and veal prices soaring. A hot, rainless summer reduced butter and cheese production, ripened a grape harvest so abundant that the bottom fell out of the wine market. Rearmament cutbacks produced spotty...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: FRANCE: Lesson from a Piece of Cheese | 9/15/1952 | See Source »

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