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

Whether Authoress Yurlova's story is embroidered, it pales into romantic unreality beside the photographs that illustrate it. Among its gory snapshots of corpses cluttering the snow, frozen into the many awkward postures of Death, one stands out as the most ghastly yet published in any war book. It is labeled an execution in Kazan. Backed against the rough-hewn wall of a log cabin eleven men, most in underclothes, barefoot, one half-naked, are standing in the snow. The volley (whose echo Authoress Yurlova compares to "an immensely swift flight of pigeons across the yard") has just crashed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Cossack Soldieret | 2/5/1934 | See Source »

...profit. ¶Hainer Hinshaw, onetime American Airways lobbyist, said Postmaster Brown had induced his company to agree not to bid on the proposed Savannah-Atlanta-Memphis-Tulsa route, since the Postoffice wanted to "take care of" Robertson Air Lines, which had been crudely frozen out of a St. Louis-New Orleans contract by one of the American Airways extensions. ¶Daniel Miller Sheaffer, executive of Pennsylvania Railroad and T. A. T., had an uncomfortable time with the committee. He admitted that Postmaster Brown had promised a transcontinental mail contract if T. A. T. would merge with Western Air Express. Result...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: International: 10-F to Honolulu | 1/22/1934 | See Source »

...renowned John H. Williams to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. The Business School, by way of the Bank of England, proffered and then received back the stormy petrel of inflation, Oliver M. W. Sprague. It remained for the Law School, where liberalism burns with a less frozen flame, to uphold the University's reputation on capitol hill and to beat its rival Law Schools hands down in point of influence on the Administration. Thanks to Professors Landis, Sayre, and most of all to the resourceful Felix Frankfurter, Harvard apparently has at least the legal destines...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: TO THE BRAIN TRUST | 1/9/1934 | See Source »

Despite the cold winds and the hard, frozen field which have hampered practice this week, the Varsity soccer eleven is fairly confident of beating the Cadets in the tussle this afternoon at 12.30 o'clock on the Business School field. Although the Army piled up huge margins in its early season games, it tied with Franklin and Marshall 1-1, and lost to Springfield College...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: VARSITY BOOTERS MEET WEST POINT TEAM TODAY | 11/18/1933 | See Source »

When Santa Claus arrives in Boston on Thanksgiving Day after a long hop from the frozen North, one hundred and fifty Harvard students, garbed in multicolored costumes and leading the weirdly shaped Tony Sarg balloons will be at hand to greet...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Harvard Students To Welcome St. Nick As Animal Keepers | 11/13/1933 | See Source »

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