LID

(redirected from League for Industrial Democracy)
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AcronymDefinition
LIDLow Impact Development
LIDLocal Improvement District
LIDLewica I Demokraci (Polish center-left political coalition)
LIDLow Incidence Disabilities (various locations)
LIDLead Independent Director (various companies)
LIDLoad Id
LIDLocal Id
LIDLogical Input Device
LIDLine Id
LIDLanguage Identification
LIDLink Interface Driver
LIDLost in the Desert (slang; Ft. Irwin, California)
LIDLiving in Denial
LIDLight Infantry Division
LIDLevodopa-Induced Dyskinesia (medical condition)
LIDLimited Ingredient Diet (Natural Balance pet food)
LIDLight Induced Degradation (solar cells)
LIDLeague for Industrial Democracy
LIDLog In Date (adoptions)
LIDLeadless Inverted Device
LIDLearning Improvement Days
LIDLogical Identifier
LIDLocal Injection and Detection (FOC)
LIDLicensed Interior Designer
LIDLoad Imbalance Detector
LIDLimited In Depth
LIDLaser Initiated Device
LIDLevy Improvement District
LIDLegislative Information Division
LIDLocal Interface Device (portable computer interface)
LIDLatinos in Development (Chicago, IL)
LIDLicense Information Document
LIDLast Issue Date
LIDLibrary Issue Document
LIDLaser Intrusion Device
LIDLeg In Disguise (airborne qualified soldier with less than 6 jumps)
LIDLinear Inertial Decoupler (Gemini Technologies, Inc.)
LIDLast Instrument Delivery
LIDLatest Induction Date
LIDLegionnaires in Doubt (Deathray song)
LIDLatch Insertion Delay
LIDLaser Image Display
LIDLead Identification Department
LIDLight Intensity Device
LIDLaser Illumination Detector
LIDLocal Information in Dorset (UK)
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References in periodicals archive ?
The first and older of the two--founded in 1917--is the League for Industrial Democracy (LID), with which the author and reformer, Upton Sinclair, was associated for many years (Johnpoll and Yerburgh, 1980).
Cohen traces the history of radical student activism from the "cafeteria commies" who started the National Student League (NSL) in December 1931 and the young socialists who added an S (for student) to the older League for Industrial Democracy (LID), through the heyday of the American Student Union (ASU) and the American Youth Congress (AYC), to the demise of the student movement in the wake of the Hitler-Stalin pact.
The Port Huron Statement refused to do so and came under the wrath ofthe fledgling SDS's parent organization, the League for Industrial Democracy (LID).
In its beginning, SDS was the student wing of one of those historic factions, the New York-based League for Industrial Democracy (LID), whose definition of anti-Communism was so far-reaching that it prohibited working with anyone who sympathized with Castro's Cuban Revolution or blamed both superpowers for the nuclear arms race instead of the Soviets alone.
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