Word: sauceritis
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Tucked away in a corner of Fogg's second floor balcony is the museum's newest acquisition, a bouillon cup and saucer reportedly used by Marie Anteinetic while imprisoned by the sanseullotes...
...saucer were donated to the Fogg by Madame Maurice Le Corbeiller, mother of Phillip Le Corbeiller, professor of Physics-and the discoverer of photo elasticity. Madame Le Corbeiller explained she had made the donation in thanks for the welcome accorded her son at the University on his arrival...
There is a "flying-saucer gun" which shoots whirling plastic disks high in the air ($1); a noiseless "space ray gun" of plastic molded around a flashlight...
...flying-saucer stories that have landed in U.S. newspapers, the most fantastic was told by a Denver oilman named Silas M. Newton. Two years ago, he solemnly told a University of Denver science class that at least three saucers, carrying crews of tiny (30-inch) men, had landed in the U.S., that the Air Force had captured the crews and was hushing up the big story. Later, to support his tale, he cited "evidence" given by a mysterious scientist whom he called "Dr. Gee." The story told by Newton, a friend of Variety Columnist Frank Scully, got Scully started...
...work he saw a machine about 75 ft. long, hovering 10 ft. above the ground, which looked as if it consisted of two large platters cupped together and ringed with small propellers. Squire said he got out of his car, walked to within 100 ft. of the saucer, saw bluish lights through portholes, and observed several figures moving inside the ship which looked like "human beings." As he walked toward it, he said, the machine rose straight up at great speed and disappeared. When Squire went on to the radio station and told his story, several colleagues went...