Word: normalization
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...want to return and with always her very gratifying "I shall never forget your kindness" (or words to that effect). It was always very convenient for me to be kind as mine have been invariably considerate of me even under the most trying cir- cumstances and with only normal wages...
...Missouri State Life's business. ¶Studebaker Corp. owned all the Class B shares, 152,000 Class A shares and 23,500 preferred shares of Fierce-Arrow Motor Car Co. Six months ago, when Studebaker Corp. passed into receivership (TIME, March 27), Fierce-Arrow went quietly on its normal way. Officers of Fierce-Arrow were chagrined, however, to have their pseudo-parent in receivership. Last week President Arthur J. Chanter of Fierce-Arrow announced that with the backing of George Franklin Rand, head of the Marine Midland group of banks, Jacob Frederick Schoellkopf, Seymour H. Knox and Roland Lord...
...skids. In the winter of 1931 when silk fell to $1.91 a pound Japan went off gold-but silk prices still went down. In June 1932 they touched $1.21. Last March silk was selling at $1.10. U. S. silk mills were operating at only about 55% of normal. Then came threat of inflation. The silk mills bought and manufactured hastily. In June silk prices mounted to $2.25. It looked as if Mr. Imai's industry would soon be back on its feet, but public purchasing did not keep pace. Silk prices flopped...
...offered these exiles asylum on the Island of Cyprus to which they flew in a British R.A.F. plane and demanded that King Feisal stay in Bagdad to punish the guilty - whether Christian or Mohammedan. To the Irak Legation in London falcon-eyed King Feisal promptly cabled: "Although everything is normal now in Irak, and in spite of my broken health, I shall await the arrival of Sir Francis Humphrys in Bagdad, but there is no reason for further anxiety. Inform the British Government of the contents of my telegram...
...lights when, the sun having gone behind a cloud, the school-room's illumination falls below average intensity. In a special class for weak-eyed pupils in Jersey City, N. J., one Westinghouse installation geared to lamps giving an intensity of 30 footcandles* (four or five times the normal classroom light), has helped the handicapped students lift their work well above the standard of children in a neighboring, plain-style classroom. Similar results were obtained after an installation by Alabama Power Co. in Tuscumbia, Ala Ideal for the future and cheaper, urged Engineer Atwater, would be schoolhouses with...