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Word: gateway (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
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Usage:

Meanwhile Dean Gauss created an 18th club to absorb the 10 percent that weren't making the grade at the time. Gateway turned out to be not such a bad club after all, and until the first war class of 1942 almost 100 percent of the college were clubmen...

Author: By David C. D. rogers, | Title: Princeton's Clubs Bow Three To Sophomore '100-percent' Drives | 11/7/1952 | See Source »

With war came more important problems. When it was ever there were only 17 clubs again--a temporary housing project had absorbed Gateway--and no 100 percent...

Author: By David C. D. rogers, | Title: Princeton's Clubs Bow Three To Sophomore '100-percent' Drives | 11/7/1952 | See Source »

Margaret's Secret Service guards, charged Stockholm's Expressen, have manhandled Swedish photographers and newsmen. Worse yet, one of them had "placed himself with a revolver at the [Stockholm] city hall gateway and refused to let Swedish citizens enter." The Yankee coppers, declared Swedish journals, were "gorillas," just "three tough guys with their left armpits bulging with artillery." The gravity of this last charge can be appreciated only if it is remembered that Swedes (like Britons) consider one of the keystones of their culture the fact that their police do not carry guns...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: SWEDEN: The Armpit Artillery Case | 9/1/1952 | See Source »

After a luncheon for 142 in Pittsburgh last week Carrier Corp.'s President Lloud* Wampler flipped a switch which turned on the world's biggest private air-conditioning system: a $5,000,000 complex which cools 68 floors in the three-building Gateway Center in Pittsburgh's new Golden Triangle of modern office buildings. It was a fitting event, for last week Carrier also celebrated the 50th anniversary of the air-conditioning industry fathered by its founder, Willis Carrier...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CORPORATIONS: The Heat Hater | 8/11/1952 | See Source »

...lives in a tony suburb of Gateway, a bustling Midwestern city. He is president of a thriving little company called Yaw-Et-Ag (Gateway spelled backwards), which manufactures musical auto horns. In a good year, he makes $20,000 before taxes, but nearly always ends up in the red. After all, one has to keep up with the next-door Ecleses. Jeff never cracks book; culture is his wife's department. He gets his fun shooting deer with a few old cronies from the Chowder & Marching Society. But he sends his boy & girl to Eastern schools...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Latter-Day Babbitt | 2/4/1952 | See Source »

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