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

...much punch in New York City politics that Tammany had kowtowed to him for over 16 years. The speaker was a young Governor named Alfred Emanuel Smith, serving his first term. Referring to Publisher Hearst, Governor Smith began: "I know he has not got a drop of good, clean, pure red blood in his whole body. And I know the color of his liver and it is whiter, if that could be, than the driven snow." The Hearst newspapers were flayed for deliberate "lies,'' for "the gravest abuse of the power of the Press in the history of this country...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: POLITICAL NOTES: Publisher on Presidency | 9/9/1935 | See Source »

...with Satevepost's George Horace Lorimer, "the most insidiously seductive Lorelei of them all ... perched on a rock known as the Curtis Publishing Company overlooking the human tide that ebbs and flows along Independence Square in Philadelphia." Author Flandrau had written pure, sexless, nonalcoholic short stories, a good clean serial called The Diary of a Freshman, when Editor Lorimer wanted him to write the diary of a professor. Author Flandrau fled to Europe. The editor, using "diplomatic and gratifying" communications, persuaded him at least to take his charming fictional college boys along. Wearily Author Flandrau capitulated, found the young...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Travel & Taboos | 9/2/1935 | See Source »

...take office for the second time, Democrats challenged the election of enough Republican Senators to create a Democratic majority in the Senate and promptly appointed an election committee which counted enough Republicans out and Democrats in to provide a permanent Democratic majority. Before midnight, the State administration was swept clean of Republicans (TIME, Jan. 21). Governor Green became the first Democrat in decades really to rule Rhode Island. Even the Republicans composing the State Supreme Court were cashiered and Governor Green refilled their places. To the new Supreme Court he appointed U. S. Representative Francis B. Condon, of Rhode Island...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: POLITICAL NOTE: Rhode Island Results | 8/19/1935 | See Source »

...careening and rolling down a bank, battering and smashing its occupants every inch of the way. can wrap itself so thoroughly around a tree that front and rear bumpers interlock, requiring an acetylene torch to cut them apart. ... A leg or arm stuck through the windshield will cut clean to the bone through vein, artery and muscle like a piece of beef under the butcher's knife. . . ." At the end of the article Reader's Digest announced: Convinced that widespread reading of this article will help curb reckless driving, reprints in leaflet form are offered at cost...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Transport: Blood & Agony | 8/12/1935 | See Source »

...bluff T. Webber Wilson laid down his big strong cigar, breezed up in a clean white suit to tell the committee his tale of difficulty and discouragement at the hands of the "Pearsonites." T. (for Thomas) Webber Wilson, onetime Congressman from Mississippi whom Senator Pat Harrison, not entirely unselfishly, rescued from political limbo with a Federal judgeship in the Islands, had previously distinguished himself by proceeding in the face of bitter opposition to prosecute a quadroon PWA clerk named Mclntosh for pilfering $38.40 worth of Government cement and lumber. Last week it developed that fierce discord had also arisen between...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: TERRITORIES: Fight & Fantasy (Cont'd) | 7/22/1935 | See Source »

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