Word: trained
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Farm Board, in a manner that has left but a train of more and greater depressed prices, after their every idiotic action, is unmanning the staple methods of handling our grain. . . . The Farm Board's efforts to soviet the raising and handling of farm products in America will come true if they are not curbed. All liberty of the American farmer will be annulled by a drastic policy of cooperatively controlled acreage. . . . We have just gone through the horrors of a banking commission trying to administer our banking business [TIME, March 31]. Must we now endure the same agonies...
...temporary hospital was thrown up which was the beginning of the world famed "Clinic City." Probably the only city of its type in the world, Rochester is a giant hospital. To it, each day, come hundreds of sufferers?by plane, train, motor, foot. All know that they will be treated. Twenty-five % are free cases; 30% pay the bare expenses of their own cases; 45% pay for running the Clinic. Besides the Brothers Mayo there are over 300 other medical men in town...
...leisurely fashion will he journey on his donkey over the path once hoofed by the famous metal-worker, Paul Revere, pointing out on the way the common of Lexington and the minute man (not a railroad train) there standing guard. Wandering on to Concord--what an appropriate name that is for the home of our big shindig--he will elucidate to the assembled Vagabonds the story of the shot heard round the world. For he feels that only a wanderer can show a good Bostonian the beauties of the local scene. The Vagabond has no birthplace and no local pride...
Mark Twain's life, for post mortem critics have discovered the many bitter pills under his palatable coating of gentle wit. For Clemens was the first American to discover that Uncle Sam would swallow an unpleasant truth if sufficiently sugared. Will Rogers has followed somewhat haltingly in his train. Why not go back to the original...
...rush hour by removing the wheels of their carts. Police said that stones were thrown at them. They replied with bullets. Six men were killed, 60 wounded, but the disturbance then quieted. On the day of the salt-making, followers of Mr. Gandhi squatted down in front of a train near Bombay, but were beaten off by police...