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

...Press as a sample of the drought in the Dakotas. Of this "gem among phony pictures," the Fargo Forum declared: "There never was a year that this scene couldn't be produced in North Dakota, even in years when rain- fall levels were far above normal. What we see here is a typical alkali flat, left when melting snow water and spring rains had passed. . . . Without difficulty one can find these in Maryland, Pennsylvania, Indiana wherever one chooses. The skull? Oh, that's a movable 'prop' which comes in handy for photographers who want to touch...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Fargo Fakery | 9/7/1936 | See Source »

Many a person living along the New York Central's right-of-way between New York and Chicago received a surprise last week as the Twentieth Century Limited rushed by. Coupled on at the rear were two slate-gray, streamlined cars, one of them relatively normal in appearance, the other definitely strange, with little square windows on two levels like the gunports of a frigate. One car was named Progress, the other Advance...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Transport: Pullman's Progress | 9/7/1936 | See Source »

...addition to the carrying of ordinary suitcases and trunks the Railway Express is the most efficient manner of sending larger and bulkier bundles to and from Cambridge. It is estimated that the normal work of this agency is quadrupled when Freshmen and upperclassmen all over the country get underway for their respective colleges...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Railway Express Agency Taxed to Utmost as Students Start to Flock Towards Cambridge | 9/1/1936 | See Source »

...normal: 2,500,000,000), smallest since 1881. Buyers scouring the country for corn were finding that farmers were not selling, needed far more feed than they had grown. Husking bees had been postponed for want of ears to husk. And in the Chicago grain pit, traders suddenly realized that outstanding sales of corn for September delivery were double the supply in terminal grain elevators. Suddenly corn bounced up 3⅞? per bu., nearly the full 4? limit allowed by the Chicago Board of Trade...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business & Finance: Corn over Wheat | 8/31/1936 | See Source »

...only to re-examine the productions themselves, but to visualize the social conditions that nourished them, to study the men who created them, to summon up what was good in that society for its measure of guidance for the present. Van Wyck Brooks sees art as a normal function of men and communities. If men of genius are frustrated in their struggles to release their creative faculties, their tragedies are reproduced in the lives of anonymous thousands for whom no records are kept, and, in the words of one of his followers, "the condition of the arts ... is intimately related...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Critic's Garland | 8/24/1936 | See Source »

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