Word: hell
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1940-1940
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Chairman Barkley subsided, turned away, waiting for the applause to stop. There was no applause. The bulbous Senator turned back, carefully read off the President's words. At this point all hell was supposed to break loose. But most of the delegates stood pat in their places, staring anxiously at the panting, roaring marchers. Then Mr. Garry broke loose. As the noise died from time to time, good Mr. Barkley would shout into the microphone: "We want Roosevelt!" Thus encouraged, Mr. Garry redoubled his roars. Mayor Kelly beamed; a man sitting in his box shouted, "Hey, Ed, We Planned...
...Witnesses' own radio station, WBBR in Brooklyn, and 140-odd others feature transcribed Rutherford lectures on such subjects as: "Is Hell Hot?", "The Keys to Heaven," "Where are the Dead," "The End of the World." Sample quote: "Religion, being an invention of the Devil, turns men away from...
Give us a Navy second to none; be ready to sacrifice "for the good of the ship"; give me the right to look any man in the eye and to tell him to go to hell...
Last week the Marine Corps announced the resignation, said nothing about Al Williams' offer of himself and his planes. Said Al Williams: "Free speech, hell! That freedom is only for those in power." But he contradicted himself by continuing to write his mind about air power. On the day his resignation was disclosed, he wrote: "Can't this gang in Washington devise one single diversion from the death march of Europe? Must we imitate every fatal error to pay the same costly price in blood...
...Then hell popped loose in the Negro press. Publisher Robert L. Vann led off with a thundering attack on Editor Brown in his Pittsburgh Courier. Manager Roxborough told an interviewer: "Earl Brown has proved himself just another Uncle Tom who . . . would sell the Negroes of America down the river...