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Word: slenderness (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...into their annual meeting at Hamburg last week as though into a morgue. Adolf Hitler has reduced Nazi interference with German industry to a minimum, placing at his Cabinet's right hand an Economic Council of industrial tycoons (TIME, July 24). But shipping is another matter. Last week slender, stern old Dr. Max von Schinckel, board chairman of Hamburg-American since 1910, rose to announce the resignation of himself and the entire board...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: GERMANY: Blindfolded | 8/7/1933 | See Source »

...weekly magazine published with a slender circulation in Oklahoma and other States in the Mid-West has made a bid for subscriptions by one of its numerous resorts to yellow journalism. "In its issue of July 17, 1933, TIME went out of its way to libel and defame the name and reputation of Charles N. Haskell, the first state governor of Oklahoma. As a delegate to the constitutional convention, as a governor of the State and as one of its delegates to four national conventions, as the publisher of a great newspaper and as a city, community and State builder...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters: Oklahoma's Haskell | 7/31/1933 | See Source »

After non-graduation from the University of Chicago and literary odd jobs in Chicago and Manhattan, Wescott went abroad to live and has been there off & on ever since, mostly in Villefranche or Paris. He is unmarried, slender, boyish-looking, with a long, smooth face, pointed, lobeless ears. He is fond of comic strips. Other books: The Apple of the Eye, Natives of the Rock, The Grandmothers, Goodbye Wisconsin, The Babe's Bed, Fear & Trembling (TIME...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Saints | 6/19/1933 | See Source »

...youngsters at Hun School in Princeton, N. J. the Besler boys were usually mistaken for twins. (Now William is dark, slender; George is blond, stocky, has a mustache.) As Princeton undergraduates they played polo, learned to fly, owned planes. As graduates they became steam-engine conscious, as are all Beslers because of the family's substantial interest in Davenport Locomotive Works. They went to California and got control of Doble Steam Motor Corp., which had been in difficulties, began producing steam automobiles, steam trucks and busses. About three years ago the Beslers and their friend Clement Harts began experiments...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Aeronautics: Flight by Steam | 4/24/1933 | See Source »

...before a socialite audience in Boston's little Peabody Playhouse strode tall, slender Francis Grover Cleveland, 29, son of Grover Cleveland, 24th President of the U. S. Cried he in a full tenor: "Heh, heh, me proud beauty! Now I have you in muh powah!" Complete with cutaway, half-inch diamond and curling black mustache, he was impersonating Villain Richard Murgatroyd in a modern burlesque of oldtime melodrama called Gold in the Hills, or the Dead Sister's Secret. The audience approved his performance with hearty hisses. The production was the first by a semiprofessional stock company...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: People, Jan. 30, 1933 | 1/30/1933 | See Source »

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