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  1. Samuel Spewack, 1899-1971 (Columbia College B.A., 1919) and Bella Cohen Spewack, (1899-1990), were authors of Broadway plays and musicals, novels, short stories, and articles. They were also foreign correspondents for Europe and Russia for the New York World, 1919-1926, and the New York Herald Tribune, 1922-1926, respectively. Subject Headings

  2. Bella (25 March 1899 – 27 April 1990) and Samuel Spewack (16 September 1899 – 14 October 1971) were a writing team. Samuel, who also directed many of their plays, was born in Bachmut, Ukraine. [1] He attended Stuyvesant High School in New York City [2] and then received his degree from Columbia College.

  3. Book Review. Samuel Huntington, Clash of Civilizations: Remaking of World. Order, New York: Simon and Schuster, 1996, 367 pp. Tables, Figures, Maps. Since the end of the Cold War, Western strategists have spent a great deal of their time on the nature of the emerging world order.

  4. Born Bella Cohen in Transylvania on March 25, 1899; died in Manhattan, New York, on April 27, 1990; daughter of Adolph Cohen and Fanny (Lang) Cohen; educated at Washington Irving High School in the Bronx, New York; married Samuel Spewack, around 1922 (died 1971); no children.

  5. SPEWACK, BELLA (1899?–1990), U.S. journalist, screen-writer, and playwright. Born in Transylvania, Bella Cohen emigrated with her mother to the Lower East Side of New York in 1903.

  6. Samuel Spewack was a journalist, novelist, stage and screen writer, and documentary film maker. He began his career as a reporter for the New York World, which sent him and his wife, Bella, to Moscow as news correspondents.

  7. Bella (25 March 1899 – 27 April 1990) and Samuel Spewack (16 September 1899 – 14 October 1971) were a husband-and-wife writing team.

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