Indeed, the official Federal Housing Administration policy back then called for " suitable restrictive covenants " to avoid " inharmonious racial or nationality groups " in housing.
22.
Gauguin's paintings of Breton peasants and sloe-eyed Tahitian maidens evoke an exotic time and place, a private otherworldly mysteriousness conveyed in unsettled shapes and saturated, inharmonious colors.
23.
The passengers are a grab bag, from an egotistical actor ( played by Andre Braugher of " Homicide " ) to an inharmonious father-son duo and an estranged gay couple.
24.
The big parades start in the afternoon, with multicolored floats, outrageous costumes and grotesque masks, serenaded by Guggenmusik _ an inharmonious but infectiously joyful mix of brass and drums _ and mountains of confetti.
25.
This statue would be put on display in the gardens around the royal palace, until the inharmonious aura caused by the quarrels of the Cutie Mark Crusaders gave him enough strength to break free of his prison.
26.
It placed the HVO under the command of the ARBiH . Cooperation was inharmonious, but enabled the transportation of weapons to ARBiH through Croatia in spite of the UN sanctioned arms embargo, reopening channels blocked by Boban.
27.
It also reflected the common view that all things made of tin were poor imitations of better quality goods ( an idea that survives in our derogatory adjective tinny ) and was also a pun on the existing sense of tin horn for a cheaply constructed and inharmonious musical instrument.
28.
The purpose of the Association shall be to promote civic, social, and moral welfare of the community : to preserve and maintain the amenities of the community and to peaceably protest inharmonious land uses which tend to detract from and reduce property values in the community and adjoining areas.
29.
It was not officially opposed to evolution theory, but its main founder James Reddie objected to Darwin's work as " " inharmonious " " and " utterly " incredible " ", and Philip Henry Gosse, author of " Omphalos ", was a vice-president.
30.
The breed had a tendency to have a too-upright shoulder angle and one author still criticized the horses as " . . . [ consisting ] of two inharmonious and badly united pieces, one being Norman; the other, English ", suggesting that better results would occur if breeders used higher-quality jumping abilities, with many successful horses competing at the international level.