Word: suspected
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...TALKING SPARROW MURDERS&151;Darwin L. Teilhet&151; Morrow ($2). The hard times of a murder suspect in Nazi Germany. Previously serialized...
...never knowing when his guards might turn executioners, had made the Vice Chancellor's eyes red from sleepless worry-or nervous weeping. Even a son of onetime All Highest Kaiser Wilhelm, gape-jawed, goggle-eyed Prince August Wilhelm ("Auwi"), had been called on the carpet as a plot suspect by bull-necked Nazi General Hermann Wilhelm Göring. After grilling perspiring "Auwi," whom he scared half to death, General Göring kicked him out of the Nazi Party and out of the Storm Troops in which he had been a group commander with the stinging words: "Dummkopf...
...killed 1,300 U. S. people, mostly housewives. Physicians, nurses and their families suffered high mortality. Rarely has a poor person died of the disease, rarely a Negro. Finding out why became Dr. Roy Rachford Kracke's job at Emory University, Atlanta. Clever reasoning led him to suspect certain new-fangled pain-killing drugs manufactured from benzamine derivatives of coal tar. Negroes, who seldom complain of minor aches or pains, do not use those drugs. Poor people cannot afford them. Doctors get them as free samples. "We have seen few physicians," said Dr. Kracke last week...
Significance. The end of the Platt Amendment under which the U. S. once (1906) sent troops to Cuba and again and again dictated the internal affairs of that island republic came with startling suddenness. Not until it was signed did Washington even suspect that a new treaty was in the making. President Roosevelt's immediate purpose in rushing the new pact through at this time was to strengthen the hands of the Mendieta regime which the U. S. helped install in office. Only three weeks ago ex-President Ramon Grau y San Martin returned to Cuba from Mexico...
...suspect that one explanation of the French success of the "Journey" is that it lays open the terrible defeatist psychology that has attached itself to the French people, the psychology that acknowledges at one time the hideousness and inevitability of War and which realizes the futility of a French victory as much as it dreads the possibility of a German...