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Word: shouldn (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
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Usage:

...briefing session that night, an officer on Ridgway's information staff conceded that "conditions are not satisfactory to the press corps . . . But the press was not [at Kaesong] because my orders were that they shouldn't be." The admission threw the press into an angry uproar. New York Times Correspondent George Barrett bellowed: "Who is responsible for this foul-up?" Then as Chief U.N. Representative Colonel Andrew J. Kinney confirmed that the Communist press was represented at Kaesong, the session broke into a tumult of charge and countercharge. Why couldn't U.N. reporters go? When Kinney admitted...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Correspondents at Bay | 7/23/1951 | See Source »

...full colonel. There was the man who sat down at an empty desk to rest his feet and forthwith found himself with a phone, blotter, desk set and secretary. And then there was the acutely pregnant woman who accosted a guard and urgently demanded the way out. "Lady, you shouldn't have come in here in that condition," he said. "But I wasn't, when I came in," she wailed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ARMED FORCES: The House of Brass | 7/2/1951 | See Source »

Said a Texas legislator at Austin: "An awful lot of stuff hit the fan today. Maybe he shouldn't have said it all-about taxes-but I'm glad he did." The crowd of 25,000 sent him on his way to Houston with a burst of vociferous applause...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: TEXAS: A Delightful Trip | 6/25/1951 | See Source »

...lengths last weekend, the Sailors can make trouble and just how much trouble they make is important. If they force the varsity to row a very tough race in its first heat, it will be less able to cope with more competent opposition in the final. Rutgers and Columbia shouldn't be much trouble...

Author: By Rudolph Kass, | Title: Eight Rows Tomorrow at Princeton | 5/18/1951 | See Source »

...bright idea had come to Old Oxonian Stacey when he got to thinking about Britain's festival year. Why, he wondered, shouldn't Oxford students themselves cash in on the tourist-trade boom? His undergraduate friends agreed, and within a few days he had signed up 90 of them to act as guides at IDS. a tour. He gave them careful instructions ("You know, point out the Dean's bathroom and that sort of thing"), and to add a bit of glamour, he even hired some London models to accompany each bus out of London and point...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Oxford Tour | 5/14/1951 | See Source »

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