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Word: ores (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1940-1949
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Usage:

...steel works (once owned jointly by the Rothschilds and the Gutmanns of Vienna). >On the Board of Rumania's largest iron & steel works (Reshitza) Göring put his nephew, Albert Göring, took over the selling outlets of Skoda in Rumania.* > In Norway, the Dunderland iron-ore mines (subsidiary of an English company, capitalized...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: World's Greatest Industrialist? | 2/24/1941 | See Source »

Last week Portland, Ore. saw a sculpture show extraordinary. All 17 pieces of sculpture at the Portland Art Museum-a few animals but mostly heads and portrait busts of people-showed curious distortions, strangely lengthened necks, prominent ears and teeth, projecting lips, bulging shoulder blades, mouths agape. Though some of the eyes in these strange statues were small and some large, all were closed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Blind Sculptors | 2/17/1941 | See Source »

Sign. In Portland, Ore., when pickets appeared outside his restaurant, Paul L. Kertes put up a sign: "Business as usual during alterCation...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Miscellany, Feb. 10, 1941 | 2/10/1941 | See Source »

Clouds hung last week like a sign in the sky over steel plants in Buffalo, Gary, Youngstown, South Chicago, Bethlehem. Pittsburgh, the city of steel, was dark, dirtier than ever as smoke belched from chimneys and rolled along the Monongahela. Twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week, ore was fed into blast furnaces, cooked, tapped out in molten iron streams. Open-hearth and Bessemer furnaces converted iron into white-hot steel which was molded into ingots, rolled and tortured into flat slabs, long, thin blooms. In strip mills, finishing plants, hot metal and cold metal was drawn...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: LABOR: C. I. O. Faces Defense | 1/27/1941 | See Source »

...that only a wizard can solve it. They must be crazy. Prospectors dig gold out of the ground, sell it to the Treasury, and they turn around and bury it in another hole in Kentucky and hire soldiers to guard it. ... A man should be able to take his ore down to the mint, get the Government to strike off the coins for him and keep the metal that rightfully belongs to him. There would be little or no paper money . . . and we would get rid of them germ-carrying dollar bills. There are 1,014 germs on every dollar...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: FISCAL: Paper Money | 1/13/1941 | See Source »

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