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Word: pseudonymous (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

...rated a routine check. Since McClain had been seen around probate court the previous week, Hirtl sent a reporter to chat with court officials. The reporter discovered that McClain had appointed a man named William Jackson to appraise a recently settled estate. Jackson, it turned out, was a pseudonym for Norman S. Payne, a probate court employee who got a fee of $100, although he was not entitled to indulge in such moonlighting...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Newspapers: How to Follow a Hunch | 12/16/1966 | See Source »

...real name, but a pseudonym supplied by the Omaha World-Herald, which first broke his story...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Neurosurgery: Life with Half a Brain | 8/5/1966 | See Source »

Writings of Sinyavsky whose pseudonym is Abram Tertz, and Daniel, whose pseudonym is Nikolai Arzhak, have been smuggled into Europe in recent years. "Both are very hostile to what's sacred in the Soviet system," Berman said. Sinyavsky, for example, once likened Lenin to "a dog baying at the moon...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Gains Are Seen In Soviet Trial | 2/17/1966 | See Source »

...says former Michigan Supreme Court Justice John Voelker, "is the ledger in which are recorded our deepest tribal memories." Justice Voelker extracted a bloody page and, under the pseudonym of Robert Traver, translated it into Anatomy of a Murder. In his current novel, set in Michigan's rugged Upper Peninsula in the 1870s, he tells the faintly fictionalized story of a Chippewa Indian girl named Laughing Whitefish, whose ignorant, much-married father has been bilked of a fortune by a powerful iron-mining corporation. An idealistic, inexperienced young lawyer undertakes to sue for her inheritance and, incidentally, to establish...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Current & Various: Oct. 22, 1965 | 10/22/1965 | See Source »

...hero and a racy Paris setting; The Interrogators, by Allan Prior, in which two doughty Scotland Yard men are hampered in their pursuit by their heavy drinking; Midnight Plus One, by Gavin Lyall, a kaleidoscopic Bondian yarn; and Cunning as a Fox, by Kyle Hunt (a pseudonym of John Creasey), in which the sleuth is a psychiatrist hired by the wanted teen-ager's frantic parents...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Television: May 28, 1965 | 5/28/1965 | See Source »

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