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Word: cashier (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...field offices were not required to account for money they collected. Sometimes they kept money around for over a year before it was entered in RFC's records. (In April the New York office had $1,300,000 in checks lying around a cashier's cage...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: GOVERNMENT: Any Loose Change Around? | 8/19/1946 | See Source »

...brothers at the University of Kentucky. They decided to go into business together after the war. When Lieutenant Colonel Clarence James Bishop, 34, a mechanical engineer, got out of the Army last fall, he put in a long distance call to Captain Charles Francis Stone III, 37, onetime bank cashier, suggested that they start that company. They decided to make prefabricated houses. They also decided that all the stockholders and employes would be veterans...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: HOUSING: Venture for Veterans | 5/27/1946 | See Source »

Your account of the founding of A. P. Giannini's Bank of Italy in that remodeled San Francisco saloon [TIME, April 15] has one mistake. The assistant cashier, Armando Pedrini, was not the saloon's bartender. Armando Pedrini, graduate of the Royal Technical Institute of Bologna, was hired away from the Columbus Savings & Loan Society where he was a teller. Later, after he had hit the top in A. P.'s organization (president of National Bankitaly Co., Bankitaly Co. America, Corp. of America), he joined up with the Elisha Walker group which tried to take over Transamerica...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters, May 20, 1946 | 5/20/1946 | See Source »

Starring Joan Bennett, as a dissolute and hard-bitten flapper, Edward G. Robinson as a weak little cashier who likes to paint pictures, and Dan Duryea, as a fip, unmoral pug, "Scarlet Street" is cynically matter-of-fact, more like a Dostoevski novel than a Hollywood bon-bon, honest to a fault...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: "Scarlet Street" and Sally Rand | 2/5/1946 | See Source »

...used all the stock props of rough, tough melodrama in his new thriller. There is the sneering, dame-slapping heel of a hero (Dan Duryea), the bad girl (Joan Bennett) who asks to be slapped around and seems to enjoy it, and the frightened, henpecked little middle-aged cashier (Edward G. Robinson) with a simple-minded yen for the girl. Everyone in the picture misbehaves and everyone comes to a bad end. Even so, studio publicists made the most of a decision by New York censors that the film is "indecent, immoral . . . and tending to corrupt morals...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: The New Pictures, Jan. 21, 1946 | 1/21/1946 | See Source »

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