Word: marked
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...than it was a year ago, attributed it to popular approval of recent Hoover-sponsored measures against Depression, popular disapproval of malicious attacks on the President by political enemies. Physically the President appeared a little greyer, a little more serious of mien than he was at the two-year mark but in excellent health...
...commission "as a mark of respect to Dr. Dan" cancelled an excursion they had planned to one of Japan's beauty spots...
...rose to volunteer as "human bombs." Such a Chinese, first soaking his clothes and bandages in gasoline, would hug a bomb to his breast with his one remaining arm and run as fast as he could to hurl himself & bomb against the Japanese. Not many "human bombs" reached their mark. Most blew up and burned up as the heroic Chinese ran into the leaden teeth of Japanese machine gun fire. Not in Shanghai but in London an English lay preacher started a movement to enlist Occidentals willing to go to Shanghai and heroically interpose themselves between the fighting Orientals until...
...Mark," Professor Lowes, Emerson...
...Bryan, George Cantor, R. N. Clattenburg, W. C. Coleman, L. D. Dawes, J. C. Ewer, J. P. Farquhar, Abbott Fay, B. S. Foss, Jr. H. H. Gass, C. M. Hadley, Jr. S. G. Haskins, F. G. Hinckley, W. E. Ingalis, Jr., O. W. Jarrell, Reid Jorgensen, J. C. Kingston, Mark Mazel, E. A. Peterson H. Richard Porter, S. R. Purcell, A. B. Reed, Jr., W. E. Richardson, W. P. Rockwell, Sumner Rodman, Howard Rosenfeld, R. S. Salant, M. S. Schiller, S. T. Skidmore, J. A. Stanton, R. A. Steel, K. C. Steele, I. M. Street, W. M. Van Winckle...