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Word: behind (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
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Usage:

...restored to magic incantations in hope that she may bring back here truant lover Daphnis. As she chants, she repeats again and again, "Ducite ab urbe domum, mea carmina, ducite Daphnim." (Draw from the city, my songs, draw Daphne home"). This refrain is very effectively entoned by three trumpets behind the scenes...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Music Box | 11/3/1938 | See Source »

...will send their booters up the river to day to meet the Crimson soccer team at 2:30 o'clock behind the Business School...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Booters Face M. I. T. Today | 11/2/1938 | See Source »

...ride over the Sierras led off an address before a section of the Eighth National Eucharistic Congress in New Orleans last week. The speaker: strapping, jovial Joseph Vincent Connolly, general manager of all Hearst newspapers. His subject: "The Press and the Church." Glowing with indignation against the "diabolical paganism behind Nazi and Communist persecutions," he reminded Catholics that Jesus was a Jew and "our beloved Mother Mary" a Jewess, offered a slogan on which the Church and the Hearst press might well agree: "The time to fight in America is NOW." Joe Connolly had just been at San Simeon...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press, Oct. 31, 1938 | 10/31/1938 | See Source »

...morning the 81,235-ton Queen Mary sailed into New York Bay last week with day breaking behind her, no hoarse flurry of twelve tugs fumed out to ease her into her mid-Manhattan berth. For three days the harbor's 300 tugs had been tied up by a strike of 2,000 tug hands, seeking $5 to $10 more a month than the present scale of $3.63 to $5 daily brings them. Last word from Longshore Tsar Joseph Patrick Ryan had been that the Queen Mary would be left standing in the harbor, "a blow to the prestige...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Transport: Commodore and Christopher | 10/31/1938 | See Source »

...speed with which they were slaughtered was no less fabulous than their flights. (In New York, says one report, 40 boatloads went begging at one cent a pigeon, were finally thrown to the hogs.) The last passenger pigeon died in the Cincinnati zoo in 1914. It now perches behind glass in the Smithsonian Institution -an exquisitely poised, apricot-breasted model for some future monument to vanished U. S. frontiers, squandered U. S. resources...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Archebiosis | 10/31/1938 | See Source »

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