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

Before the Labor Board could pass on the case, the A. F. of L. took its iron-clad contract to a Federal district court, which ordered National Electric to live up to its terms-an order the company gladly obeyed. Last week, just as National Electric was posting this order throughout its plant, the Labor Board cracked down with a thunderous ruling that the A. F. of L. contract was "void and of no effect." Its "precipitate granting," held the Board, smacked of trickery, since the company knew that the A. F. of L. union "did not represent the free...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: LABOR: Board v. Bench | 9/13/1937 | See Source »

Starting as a passive revolt to keep farm products from the market, dogged farmers in the southern agricultural areas shut themselves in their straw-thatched izby, refused to buy or sell, to work any land but their own. Last week, gaunt, rag-clad peasants, enraged at individuals who profited by delivering foodstuffs, took to barring the roads, overturning market trucks, destroying farm produce. Reports seeping through the iron press censorship told of sporadic clashes with police, with 56 casualties the result. Before long the strike took an anti-Semitic turn. Roving peasant bands attacked Jewish markets, set upon Jewish peddlers...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: POLAND: Embattled Farmers | 9/6/1937 | See Source »

...Americans. To Madame Ichikawa, who claims the Japanese character "is like a peppercorn, small but hot," the English were the least compatible people she found. Students looked "just like asparagus cultivated under glass," so soft and pink that she thought they might be almost edible. Flat-heeled, brown-clad English women all looked like schoolteachers. Under the withering catechism of Author Walter De La Mare, Madame Ichikawa admitted that the only things good about England were "the policeman, cart-horses and Simpson's beef-steak." * The worst example of English bad taste she found in her hotel lavatory, where...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Japan's Provincial Lady | 7/19/1937 | See Source »

...Atlantic City, N. J. ("Playground of the World") say that the resort's first sand sculptor was a young artist who showed up on the beach one day in the 1890's and molded from a mountain of wet sand a lifelike figure of a scantily-clad young woman clutching a baby. He labeled the result "Cast up by the Sea." The piece so affected passersby on the boardwalk above that they tossed coins down to the artist, who was soon followed to the beach by other itinerant modelers. By 1910 sand sculptors, with bucket, blanket...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Sand Sculptors | 6/21/1937 | See Source »

...visiting firemen, reputed to have tickled into Leverett House from Rollins and Dartmouth, relieved the exam period monotony early yesterday morning by leaping from a first floor window in Leverett and running up and down Plympton St., clad only in their underwear...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: PLYMPTON ST. SCENE OF WILD EARLY MORNING NUDIST ORGY | 6/9/1937 | See Source »

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