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

...managing editor of the defunct Chicago Post, swart, husky Michael Wolf Straus used to "raise merry hell" with the furious but futile efforts of Reformer Harold L. Ickes to clean up Chicago politics. A reformer himself, Editor Straus also raised hell with other local celebrities like Al Capone. Later he went to Washington as a Hearst correspondent and in June 1933, when Secretary of the Interior Ickes wanted a "director of information" (i. e., head pressagent) for Interior and PWA, he chose hell-raising Mike Straus. Since then the nation has heard plenty from him about Honest Harold Ickes...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Information Men | 1/16/1939 | See Source »

...only to be hoped that sometime, somewhere, she will be made to play a whole scene with her hands in her pockets. But Miss Cowl is not the whole show by any means. Percy Waram is grand as the stingy and irascible Vanergelder, known to his subordinates as the "wolf trap". Tom Ewell, in the role of Cornelius Hackl who is getting away from it all for the first time in his life at the age of 33, is corking. June Walker, staunch old trooper, turns in an adequate performance and John Call, Joseph Sweeney, Bartlett Robinson (who looks startlingly...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Playgoer | 12/13/1938 | See Source »

...thing Michael proves is that Goebbels was a worse novelist than Hitler was a painter. It also reveals why Goebbels takes so much interest in Nazi novels. A few established novelists, like Hans Fallada, whose Wolf Among Wolves (Putnam, $3) was published last month, avoid such mystical propaganda. But Goebbels eggs on young writers (more than 100 new authors have popped up in the last five years), while older ones like Fallada go on writing just as they did before Germany's least talented author became the director of her literary life...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Goebbels Art | 12/5/1938 | See Source »

...sultans and califs, President Kamal Atatürk, long ill, died of cirrhosis of the liver. Beside his death bed wept his sister and two of his most intimate friends: Ali Fethi Okyar, Ambassador to the Court of St. James's who had stood faithfully by the Grey Wolf's side when Atatürk was waging a desperate uphill battle to save Turkey from dismemberment after the World War; and Sabiha Gökgen, one of his five adopted daughters, who is a Turkish Air Force pilot.* One grief-stricken friend. Salih Bozuk, put a pistol...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: TURKEY: Martinet | 11/21/1938 | See Source »

...Warren Club, John O. Rhome Jr., West Allenhurst, New Jersey and Donald O. Shurtleff, Lincoln, Nebraska; for the Holmes Club, John H. Ferguson, Oklahoma City, and John E. O'Keefe Jr., Carthage, Missouri and for the Simpson-Sayre Club, Robert Braucher, of Massapequa, New York and Robert B. Wolf, of Elkins Park, Maryland...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: AMES COMPETITION HITS SEMI-FINALS | 11/14/1938 | See Source »

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