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...joint House military-naval subcommittee promptly undertook an inquiry into "loafers" and "expediters." First Witness Bill Jeffers explained: a loafer, in railroad vernacular, is "a person assigned to an unnecessary job." In that category he put "socalled inspectors and expediters" who were trying to "take over production and tell managers how to do their jobs." Answer came from another witness, Under Secretary of War Robert Patterson: Army and Navy representatives were "indispensable" breakers of bottlenecks in war plants; "Mr. Jeffers himself has a corps of expediters in his rubber program...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE ADMINISTRATION: 43.6% for Rubber | 2/8/1943 | See Source »

Having slept in many a foxhole with him, I take TIME to task for a flippantly misleading background sketch of a most able man, neither melancholy nor laconic, and in the vernacular of the "Cousin Jacks" (an Army nickname pinned on Searls because of his fund of Welsh miners' stories) I say "Back...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters, Mar. 30, 1942 | 3/30/1942 | See Source »

...Goldwyn's hired hands have worked hard to give us a new slant on the old hick-meets-city-girl situation. This version has Gary Cooper as a musty grammarian who goes to the masses in search of live vernacular. Inevitably, he meets Barbara Stanwyck, who is a night-club warbler with Gene Krupa's orchestra. She talks a Hollywoodish brand of slang that will leave even the boys from Lindy's open-mouthed...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE MOVIEGOER | 1/8/1942 | See Source »

...died early in Look Homeward, Angel) is a short, beautifully disciplined work, in a style of which Wolfe is popularly supposed to have been incapable. Chickamauga, which Wolfe slicked up unnaturally in the vain hope of selling it to the Satevepost, is a respectable experiment in the U.S. vernacular, as un-Wolfeishly plain as weathered bone. Also included: a steely-clean character sketch of a rich old New Yorker waking up; an almost religious essay on loneliness; a hard spanking of a literary critic who might be William Lyon Phelps or Henry Seidel Canby; a Swiftian attack on Irishmen...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Last Words | 10/20/1941 | See Source »

Anyway, that is the gist of what each Eli says when he gives the Long Cheer, for in Aristo phones' "The Frogs" the frogs yell at the people going to the underworld. "Bre-ke-ke-kex," which translated into American vernacular means "Go to h--, you bums." At the same time, the bre-ke-ke-kex is the three staccato dots and the long dash which stand for "V" for Victory." --From the Yale News...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE CRIME | 10/18/1941 | See Source »

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