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Word: rodes (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
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Usage:

...quarter of a ton of Mayors rode out of New Orleans in an automobile one day last week. They were going to a horse race. At a rut in the road, the car lurched violently. Safe as mutton sat 300-lb. Mayor Arthur J. O'Keefe of New Orleans. Startled into silence, 250-lb. Mayor William Hale ("Big Bill") Thompson of Chicago shot aloft, collided with the top, came down with nose and lip cut and bleeding. Next day the Young Men's Republican Club of New Orleans adopted a resolution which would have salved worse wounds...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: POLITICAL NOTES: Rut | 2/13/1928 | See Source »

Ashore once more, all was well with President Coolidge. He rode around the streets of Key West in an automobile, climbed into the Coolidge Special, slumbered deeply up the Keys and through Florida to Jacksonville, where he got up and called for a breakfast beginning with Spanish melon. Governor John W. Martin of Florida was at the Jacksonville station, (with Mayor John T. Alsop and many a big fruitgrower. The President shook their hands, looked around, re-entrained for Washington. The Coolidge Special's cinema that evening was Uncle Tom's Cabin...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE PRESIDENCY: The Coolidge Week: Jan. 30, 1928 | 1/30/1928 | See Source »

...Cavalry Cossacks with a score of 15 to 9 Saturday in the Commonwealth Armory. G. O. Clark '31 was the outstanding player of the game. He was responsible for nine of the Harvard goals and was especially strong in his defensive game. Vroom, who played for the Cossacks, rode and carried well for the losers...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CAVALRY COSSACKS LOSE TO 1931 RIDERS IN POLO CLASH | 1/30/1928 | See Source »

...early adolescence; he watched the branches of his family twist and struggle along trellises of suffering and achievement. He worked in the fields of the great farm, fell in love with Dora Tarkington, filled his mind with knowledge. Then a day came when, with Dora and his mother he rode to the station, carrying a shoe box full of sandwiches. When the train came in, David said goodby and boarded it for Springfield. There he would work, study and, afterward, practice law. On that day the story ends...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Small President | 1/9/1928 | See Source »

...duchess is the slow bulging hub of a wheel whose whirling spokes are a glitter of medieval cities and country castles, deaths and tournaments and plagues. Jews who lent money and princes who rode through summer dusts or winter snows, bishops who begat bastards, kings who kept mistresses and died of wounds; all the remote and entangled brightness of a century, like all past

Author: /time Magazine | Title: NON-FICTION: Dancer's Life | 1/2/1928 | See Source »

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