Word: border
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...importance," confirming as they did the Canadian Supreme Court which gave Canada's "New Deal" a tentative scrapping last spring (TIME, June 29). As was then stressed, Canada's unconstitutional NPMA (Natural Products Marketing Act) was similar but less inclusive than the unconstitutional NRA south of the border; but Canada's unconstitutional ESIA (Employment & Social Insurance Act) was not so much an imitation of Washington's Social Security as of the (in England) perfectly constitutional "Dole." The Canadian Supreme Court last summer and the Privy Council last week both held constitutional and valid the FCAA (Farmers...
Jean-de-Luz, just over the French border, then to London.-ED. No Panacea Sirs: Thanks to TIME for the most concisely complete account of the coming of unicameralism in Nebraska. One small point of error: TIME accented too strongly the novelty of unicameralism in the U. S. A century ago most of our larger cities turned from unicameralism to bicameral-ism; during the past 60 years virtually all have returned to the original unicameral council. To foresee the results of unicameralism in State government we need only consult the experience of our large cities, many of them more populous...
After due consideration of the claims of all three the editors of TEMPUS finally decided on Cleopatra and they placed her photograph on the title page with a bright red border around...
...Sergeant Grischa was added this week Author van der Meersch's Invasion-the first novel to show what the War was like for civilians caught behind the German lines. Invasion's scene is the district around Lille, in northern France, a narrow strip between the Belgian border and the trenches of the Western Front. In that crowded industrial area, in 1914, were three towns, a dozen villages, hundreds of thousands of people. Invasion's principal characters number more than 50, represent every type of noncombatant, every fortune of war. In 707 pages Author van der Meersch tells...
...licenses to export $4,500,000 of similar second-hand war goods to Spain via Mexico: 4) Felix Gordon de Ordaz, Spanish Ambassador to Mexico, who was flying to Washington to sign the final papers so that 15 of Mr. Dineley's planes could hastily hop across the border to Mexico...