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Word: namelessness (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...oratori cal but artfully journalistic. Her book, subtitled Middletown -Nazi Version, is a narration of fact throughout, and she has taken convincing care that her characters and her facts shall be typical. In a prologue and ten stories she brings into detailed focus the nature of a nameless German city shortly before the war: the sickness of all its parts, the inchoate readiness of its people to overthrow the leaders they had accepted. By the time she is done she has left little untouched that makes up a community or a nation: industry, small shopkeeping, the peasantry, law, marriage...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Manns on Germany | 5/27/1940 | See Source »

Without a job himself Mickey McGuire decided to put his name to work. He planned to take Mickey McGuire on a ten-week vaudeville tour. McGuire never went. For this time Mickey was not only jobless but nameless. Irate Cartoonist Fox had haled him into court, forced Mickey to relinquish the name McGuire. But Fox could not make him give up Mickey. In a moment of inspiration Mom suggested that Mickey take the surname Looney. Mickey changed it to Rooney...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: Success Story | 3/18/1940 | See Source »

...born as to be nameless, Aretino took his name from his town, Arezzo, where he was born on Good Friday of the year Columbus sighted America. (Good Friday, as his enemies loved to remind the world, was the legendary birthday of the Antichrist.) Mature and restive at 15, he quit home. He worked, during the next few years, as a servant in Rome, a street singer, a hostler in Bologna, a moneylender's agent, tax collector, mule driver, hangman's assistant, miller, courier, pimp, mountebank, swindler, galley slave. At 24 he got into the service of Agostino Chigi...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Resurrection | 3/18/1940 | See Source »

...National Association of the U. S. rose, fell, and left him dying (of a broken heart, some said); the Knights of Labor, "one big union" for all workers; whiskered John Rae, first U. M. W. A. president, whose son appeared at the convention last week. There were the nameless dead-of catastrophe, foul air, killing hours in the mines; murdered by company thugs; murdered, too, by union gangs whose internecine wars reddened the rise of U. M. W. A. and John Lewis. And at home last week in Glenalum, Sarah Ann and Carbondale, Black Lick and Conemaugh, in coal towns...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: LABOR: Jubilee | 2/5/1940 | See Source »

...people, the masses, nameless and anonymous numbers of persons not listed nor published among those present-these redeemed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Your Obt. Servt. | 12/4/1939 | See Source »

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