Word: terrorizing
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...League rule or 3) join France. As the 150,000 Saar Bummlers rode off to Coblenz last week 60,000 other Saarlander mass-met at Sulzbach in the Saar. "Don't vote to rejoin Germany " they were told by Socialist, Catholic and Communist orators. "Hitler means war, misery and terror...
...witty, handsome and preposterous adaptation of Edwin Justus Mayer's play, The Firebrand, The Affairs of Cellini would be a notable comedy if its only merit were Frank Morgan's performance as the Duke. Befuddled, stuttering, overcome by terror of his wife and incorrigibly concupiscent, Alessandro throughout The Affairs of Cellini never quite succeeds in finishing a single sentence...
...rise to power of a new class. In the U. S. both these ingredients are slowly in the making. To anxious readers who would like to know if the revolution will be violent when it comes. Analyzer Soule rejoins that revolutions in themselves are seldom violent. "Reigns of terror, civil war, revolutionary war. are conducted not to bring about revolution, but to preserve it." Only half-reassured, the anxious reader will then want to know how soon the revolution will be upon him. Author Soule cautiously replies: "Some time in the future-perhaps not for another generation or two-there...
FIVE DAYS IN BONDS That was the Star's manner of heralding two stories which screamed from the front pages of nearly every newspaper in the land for most of the week. Most of the headlines were more explicit. Instead of "Joy After Terror." The Los Angeles Times...
...wives. Panels slide, black cats stalk, mysterious servants silently do their masters' bidding, and strong wills vie with each other. The loosely connected story fails to give even a logical order to the plot, and the result is an unconvincing succession of almost unrelated incidents designed to strike terror to the hearts of men. Even the "black cat" has nothing to do with the general action, but is an extraneous importation from Edgar Allan Poe, used only to give the piece a title...