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

...party. They provide 75% of its funds, control 17 of 28 seats in the National Executive Committee, elect 93 of Labor's 258 M.P.s, and cast blocks of a million or more votes at party conferences. And Gaitskell also appealed to the original aims for which Keir Hardie and his cloth-capped trade-union radicals-none of them socialists in the doctrinaire sense of the continental European Socialist parties-founded the British Labor Party at the turn of the century...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: GREAT BRITAIN: Inquest at Blackpool | 12/7/1959 | See Source »

...members of the Society from Eliot are Ernest S. Abers, Edward D. Aswell, Morton M. Hackman, Robert S. Kandel, Herbert R. Kohl, Dexter W. Lawson, Joseph S. Lelyveld, James R. McCredie, A. E. Keir Nash, James H. Rieger, and Harold M. Ross...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Phi Beta Kappa Will Initiate Eighty New Seniors as Members | 6/9/1958 | See Source »

...While the latest is sue (December) of the Advocate gives no indication that the magazine itself will ever accept the challenge, it does show clearly that some of the writers it publishes have. One of its poems, "Report of the Artist's Progress to his Doctor" by A. E. Keir Nash is specificaly concerned with the artist and another, "The Exhortation to an Audience, to be Still" by Arthur W. Freeman, indirectly...

Author: By John H. Fincher, | Title: The Advocate | 1/7/1958 | See Source »

...black and white and gray by Willard Midgette looks out from the cover of the latest Advocate with a seniorial air of wisdom. Both the color and the air of the owl match those of the two stories therein, by Sallie Bingham and A.E. Keir Nash...

Author: By John H. Fincher, | Title: The Advocate | 12/2/1957 | See Source »

Although 58's poetry is one the whole unexciting, A. E. Keir Nash's "Der Blaue Reiter" uses some very effective imagery in portraying the imaginative travels of a little boy on a wooden horse. Sallie Bingham seems to take a rather ambivalent attitude toward "The Young Girls," who "love in prudent silence on the frozen ground." Some allusions which bring to mind the Seven Dwarfs ("And start to work with soap, and heavy towels . . .") weaken the poem considerably. In his poem about Perseus, William Teunis describes the gods as "con-vanished," so it is somewhat jarring when they reappear...

Author: By Frank R. Safford, | Title: The Freshman Review | 5/18/1955 | See Source »

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