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

...call when people here received tales of horror. . . . Didn't we learn something then? Are we going to be worked into a similar frenzy?" Congress, however, was not to be denied the fun of counter-baiting the Brown-Shirts. Before the House Rules Commit tee, Representative Samuel Dickstein of New York, who is perennially excited about alien infiltrations, charged that one Fritz Kuhn, onetime Ford Motor Co. chem ist, had organized a subversive army of 200,000 Nazis in the U. S. Discovered by newshawks in a Detroit office plastered with Nazi swastikas, Chemist Kuhn eagerly admitted that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE CABINET: Relations Beclouded | 3/22/1937 | See Source »

Well informed political observers at the Capitol and Samuel E. Morison '06, professor of History and leader of the opposition to the statute for the Teachers' Association, were confident that the proposal would be passed by the higher body by an overwhelming vote and subsequently signed by the governor...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: HOUSE VOTES TO DOWN OATH BILL BY 120-112 | 3/19/1937 | See Source »

...dinner will be semi-formal, with all the members of the house sitting at long tables. It is hoped that all the men can go in together when lights turned on the tower signal that the doors are open. The Reverend Samuel A. Eliot '84 will then ask the blessing...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: News from the Houses | 3/18/1937 | See Source »

...horrors of those ignorant days. The author's faithful adherence to facts which could have been accumulated only by extensive research into the Archives of Salem and Boston brings to the reading public much that is actually biographical about the lives of such men as Cotton and Increase Mather, Samuel Parris, Goody Bishop, Stoughton, Phips, and other figures of Massachusetts' early history...

Author: By J.g.b. Jr., | Title: THE CRIMSON BOOKSHELF | 3/18/1937 | See Source »

...with the greatest possible fidelity to the facts. Cotton Mather, the austere and prejudiced young minister from Boston, appears at first as a wholly detestable figure in the book, but upon consideration we realize that his closed mind was no different from the of almost every citizen of Salem. Samuel Parris, whose interest in the conviction of several of the witches was more than a religious one, Nathaniel Saltonsall, the only man in Salem who had the strength to stand up and refuse to assist at the trials, and many others remain in our memory as living people...

Author: By J.g.b. Jr., | Title: THE CRIMSON BOOKSHELF | 3/18/1937 | See Source »

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