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

...Roman Catholic churchmen take part in worldly affairs they usually do so unobtrusively, reversing the tactics used such persons as Los Angeles' loud Methodist "Bob" Shuler on the radio and Virginia's astute Methodist James Cannon Jr. on the stump and in the newspapers. Rev. Charles Edward Coughlin of Detroit is a blaring Roman Catholic exception. His voice as blatant as Preacher Shuler's, his words as un-clerical as Bishop Cannon's, he is known to large sections of the U.S. as a rousing, throbbing radiorator on the "Catholic Charrch" and, more lately...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: Priest v. Press | 4/10/1933 | See Source »

...week expenses and build a showy "Charity Crucifixion Tower," buy statuary for the Shrine. Criticism he can ignore, even that of Boston's stocky old William Henry Cardinal O'Connell who has muttered, "It is better for everyone concerned when a priest keeps his place." For Father Coughlin is responsible only to his superior, Bishop Michael James Gallagher. And he claims the backing of Pope Pius XI who has said that "every minister of holy religion must throw himself, heart and mind, into the conflict for social justice." Last fortnight and again last week, Father Coughlin...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: Priest v. Press | 4/10/1933 | See Source »

...Father Coughlin's small bungalow in the Detroit suburbs, late one night last week, were himself, his assistant and a Franciscan monk. Father Coughlin's bedroom is on the ground floor; the others above. At 3 a. m. came a sharp explosion. Father Coughlin was shaken out of bed, he said. Neighbors awoke, called police. Father Coughlin called his good friend Mayor Frank Murphy. Streets were roped off, the house surrounded by guards. In the basement, police found remains of a crude, small black-powder bomb. The explosion had wrecked a steam-pipe, broken windows, spattered canned goods...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: Priest v. Press | 4/10/1933 | See Source »

...bombing of Father Coughlin's house came with singular if not sinister timeliness. He immediately charged that it was an attempt at intimidation, a further persecution of him by his enemies. Having leaped into the thick of Detroit's banking fracas (TIME, April 3), Father Coughlin had just publicly aspersed E. D. Stair, publisher of the Detroit Free Press and non-salaried president of the holding company for closed First National Bank. Father Coughlin had talked of "smart money," charged that insiders gutted First National before the banking holiday...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: Priest v. Press | 4/10/1933 | See Source »

...Free Press had swiftly countered by getting at Father Coughlin's bank and brokerage accounts. Photostating one of them with the label "smart money," it showed that Father Coughlin's balances had been as high as $55,516.20 in June 1930, that in the same year he had lost $13,955.89 on a $30,110.89 stock deal. The Free Press showed that Father Coughlin had sometimes deposited $20,000 at a time in $1 bills- gifts from radio listeners -and that part of the stock he bought was paid for with money from the account of the radio...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: Priest v. Press | 4/10/1933 | See Source »

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