Word: clained
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...wrote in an e-mail. It’s possible, though, that the employees’ positions might not be secure in the long run. In an e-mail addressed to the “faculty and staff” of the department, Deborah R. Clain, director of administration and finance at the Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, said the layoffs had been rescinded. But, she added, “this does not mean that there will be no layoffs due to the robotics automation of the cage washing function, but rather that an eventual decision about this will...
...years on the House Foreign Affairs and Senate Foreign Relations Committees, Tom Connally has inevitably picked up a good deal of information. He has visited Europe several times. But he has no clain to expertness in the endless subtleties and complexities of foreign relations. He shows none of the scholarly inclinations in the field of international affairs which have distinguished his great predecessors in the Foreign Relations chairmanship. In knowledge and experience he ranks far closer to William J. ("Gumshoe Bill") Stone, the Missouri lawyer-politician who stubbornly opposed Wilson's war policies as chairman in 1914-18, than...
Mesdames Edward T. Stotesbury and Alexander W. Biddle of Philadelphia; Mrs. Horace E. Dodge of Detroit; Messrs. Samuel M. Vau-clain (Baldwin Locomotives), John S. Pillsbury (Pillsbury Flour) and Harry S. Black (The Plaza) . . . . H. R. H. the King of Greece . . . . H. H. the Countess of Lauderdale (England) - in trim aristocratic capitals the names were printed, not upon a list of opera patrons or letterhead of a new relief fund, but upon a most elegant double-page spread in the New York Times last week, advertising the latest, the very last thing in Florida realty- "the Floranada Club." An organization...
| 1 |