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Word: reenters (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...diplomacy, which is the most heady of all stimulants to war. But European economics make war at the present time a virtual impossibility and between the prestige of Geneva and the need for Hitler's reentry to international grace there is small choice. Stress the instrument to make that reenter possible; if France and Great Britain reject it, they must do so at a risk which, in the long run, would be unwise to take. POLLUX...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Yesterday | 10/21/1933 | See Source »

...York, becoming interested in politics. In 1916 he was sued for a large amount by an elderly woman who declared he had misused securities she had turned over to him. In connection with this he spent a short while in jail. Afterward, he tried to reenter politics, but unsuccessfully. When the war started he joined the army, being stationed in Georgia, where he was judge advocate of his outfit. He has been seen little in New York since the war and is presumed to live now at a small town in Pennsylvania, his birthplace. He is about fifty-five...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: "R-i-i-ne-hart!" | 2/8/1930 | See Source »

...readmission letter" sent out each year from the Dean's Office to those men who are seeking to reenter in the fall, appears this year according to the newly established changes as follows...

Author: By A. C. Hanford, | Title: UNIVERSITY HALL CLAMPS DOWN ON READMITTED MEN | 6/1/1929 | See Source »

...week, though they do the same work as the men. After they return from the mills they must do housework and try to snatch some rest during the day while caring for their youngest children under school age. They work up to the last months of pregnancy and reenter the mills shortly after childbirth. The effects of this life are stamped upon them indelibly. Their backs are bent from the very nature of the work; their faces are pallid and drawn: their expression is haggard and listless: and they are worn with care and privation...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: DRASTIC CUT IN WAGES CAUSES STRIKE AMONG PASSAIC MILL WORKERS | 3/19/1926 | See Source »

...trouble, which last week led to the initial stages of a religious war, started last year, when the Premier promised suppression of the French Embassy to the Vatican and enforcement of the laws relative to religious orders (TIME, May 19, Sept. 8) which were allowed to reenter France during and after the War. The Premier also promised to apply all the religious laws to Alsace and Lorraine which were to be enforced in France, despite earlier promises that the two Provinces would be permitted to enjoy the full religious freedom that they enjoyed under the Germans...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: FRANCE: Religion | 3/23/1925 | See Source »

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