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

Edna May Oliver is entitled to many of the remaining honors for her characterization of Miss Pross, the best of the pre-Wodehouse servants. No part could suit her better than that of this stiff, self-righteous, devoted maid-companion, to whom non-churchgoers are Atheists and the whole world is at the call of her ladybird. Blanche Yurka takes the part of Madame DeFarge, the fanatical wife of the wine shop keeper who heads the Jacquerie. She is in the role of an intensely emotional and overbearing personality such as she has played on the legitimate stage for many...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: * The Moviegoer * | 1/6/1936 | See Source »

HARVARD CORNELL Prouty, lf. 2b., Kreimer Adzigian, 3b. 1b., Froehlich Gibbs, cf. lf., Dugan Bilodeau, 1b. cf., Downer Owen, rf. rf., Switzer Woodruff, ss. 3b., Mayer Maguire, c. c., Krukowski Hayes, 2b. ss., Jordan Lincoln, p. p., Pross...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: VARSITY NINE STRONG FAVORITE OVER CORNELL | 5/4/1935 | See Source »

...Pennsylvania 1 0 1.000 Pasto, Cornell 4 1 .800 deBettencourt, Columbia 2 1 .667 Miller, Dartmouth 2 1 .667 LOUGHLIN, HARVARD 2 2 .500 Barton, Pennsylvania 2 2 .500 Harrington, Pennsylvania 1 1 .500 Parker, Yale 2 3 .400 Meisel, Columbia 2 3 .400 Kammer, Princeton 1 2 .333 Pross, Cornell 1 2 .333 Gesnel, Princeton 1 2 .333 Reichel, Princeton 0 1 .000 Olson, Dartmouth...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: BASEBALL PLAYERS BATTING AVERAGES | 5/15/1934 | See Source »

HARVARD CORNELL Ware, c.f. s.s., Kreimer Adzigian, 3b. 2b., Frost Nevin, 1b. lf, Dugan F. Gleason, l.f. c.f., Downer Gibbs, r.f. r.f., Froehlich Maguire, c. 1b., Draney Fitzpatrick, 2b. p., Pross and Pasto Woodruff, s.s. c., Wallace Loughlin and Braggiotti, p. 3b., Mayer...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: CORNELL'S STRONG NINE PLAYS TODAY IN DOUBLEHEADER | 5/4/1934 | See Source »

...aware of the immediate danger of American implication in an oriental war. This danger makes an intelligent popular opinion not only desirable but necessary. Yet until now public ideas on the subject have been of necessity superficial; they have been based exclusively on facts gained from a prejudiced pross, and have had no roots in an understanding of the national temperaments of the participants. Oriental civilizations, moreover, have remained an esoteric study in the United States; literary and cultural communication has been slight, and there has been no community of race and religion...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE TWAIN SHALL MEET | 3/28/1932 | See Source »

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