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

...years ago had President Alexander ("Sandy") Calder of Union Bag & Paper Corp. asked his stockholders to split their stock four-for-one, they probably would have balked. The price of their shares was down to $5 and such a split would have reduced their stock certificates to shinplasters. But last week his stockholders had only applause for Sandy Calder. They gladly voted to split their stock four-for-one and their new stock was traded at prices upwards of $18, for in five years Recovery and Sandy Calder-but mostly Mr. Calder-had boosted the value of their shares around...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Paper Profits | 9/27/1937 | See Source »

...many painful autums at least one person has pondered the plight of the friendless Freshman who reaches the Yard with a bag in one hand and shaking fingers in the other. It is hard for the popular Andoverite or Grotonian to understand the feeling of complete, bitter solitude which assails countless new students the first few days of their college career. The Union has tried to mitigate this condition by providing an excellent buffet supper on registration day, served by waitresses with motherly smiles. What with the awful immensity of Memorial Hall and the complexities of the registration card, University...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: REFUGE FOR LONELY HEARTS | 9/25/1937 | See Source »

Barely waiting to unpack, Mabel set off with a bag of oranges to break down the Indians' aloofness. Hastening her steps was the dread thought that "if people knew about what is here, they'd rush upon it and simply eat it up. ..." With a possessiveness much like that which she had formerly felt toward artists and writers, she declared fiercely: "I'd hate to have these Indians get recognition! Why, it would be the end of them!" Her first stop was at an adobe hut where a blanketed full-blooded Indian named Tony Luhan...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Vol. IV, Marriage IV | 9/20/1937 | See Source »

These were not the only fascinating ears which Robert Carter Cook, editor of the Journal oj Heredity, fished out of the genetics grab bag. He also produced the ears of the Canright and Powell families. The ears of the Powells, starting with F. J. Powell, a retired merchant of West Lafayette, Ohio, are lobeless - i.e., the "lobes" are fastened to the skin of the neck. The ear lobes of Harry Lee Canright, onetime a medical missionary at Chengtu, China, and of his family are free. Dr. Canright's free-lobed daughter married lobeless Eugene F. Powell, zoologist...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Genetics of Ears | 9/6/1937 | See Source »

...anonymous telephone tip sent police scurrying to the tightly-barred garage operated by one Meyer Luckman in Brooklyn the night of March 3, 1935. Inside, stuffed in a bloody canvas bag in the rear compartment of a Ford coupé, they found the warm, freshly-strangled body of Meyer Luckman's brother-in-law and bookkeeper. Samuel Drukman. Caught in the garage, with blood on hands and clothes, were three men: Meyer Luckman, a nephew Harry Luckman, and an ex-convict employe named Fred Hull...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Law: Gamble | 8/9/1937 | See Source »

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