Search Details

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

...Anglican bishop's sister, numerous Oxonians and Hon. Carl Vrooman of Bloomington, 111. To newshawks last week Frank Buchman declared: "Not one of us is employed. Yet we have managed to come across. I have not received a salary since 1922, but I manage somehow to live out of my seven suitcases. ... I haven't any idea of where all the money comes from...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: Traveling Team | 3/26/1934 | See Source »

...attention to Fannie Hurst, but plain readers have made her one of the most popular dishes on the counter. Anitra's Dance tells of a wild household of hyphenated Americans noisily existing on Manhattan's Riverside Drive. Head of the house was Papa Bruno, famed musician who somehow managed to do his composing in the same room with a squabbling family bridge game. Other dwellers under the stormy roof were his peasanty wife, a fat daughter and her secretive husband, a loafing son with whom Bruno was always on the verge of a dangerous quarrel, a superannuated clerk...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Hurstwurst | 3/26/1934 | See Source »

...aside from these facets of the problem, which can probably be met somehow, through not with the case expected by the scheme's proponents, there is a definite political issue. Can the Labor Party afford to set its attention on these minor material salients without a corresponding change in its psychology? For the danger is this, that a Socialist Party, as history has shown, exhibits a fatal tendency to regard these concessions which in a parasitical way it has sucked from the sick body of capitalism as ends in themselves and not simply as incidental to their larger goal...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Yesterday | 3/19/1934 | See Source »

...taxpayer and he himself would be subject to all the humiliation that comes with an indictment in the court of public opinion. If the grand jury subsequently refused to indict, the injustice would not be erased. There would always be the innuendo derived from the publicity given originally that somehow the taxpayer wasn't exactly on the level with his government...

Author: By David Lawrence, | Title: Today in Washington | 3/17/1934 | See Source »

...slight exaggeration of this humor. In this morning's Crime column, which, many of us think, richly deserves its name, one of the campus figures, V. H. Kramer '35, was rather brutally treated. The fact that he was so treated because of his connection with the Model League, which somehow the CRIMSON in its aloof attitude was unable to stomach, does not change the situation or excuse...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Little Napoleon | 3/13/1934 | See Source »

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