Word: chases
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...Mary Chase, Denver author of Broadway's Harvey, explained to visiting Columnist Ward Morehouse how success had changed things: "I used to be a little fonder of people. I had a lot of good friends. . . . I made my biggest mistake in the way I returned here after Harvey was a success. . . . I sneaked in the back door, and didn't give them a chance to be proud...
Somewhere in the Night (20th Century-Fox) is a beryllium-hard thriller and a rattling good celluloid chase. Goal of the fast, frenzied search: the hero's lost memory...
...Chase. Last week the Army had the answer. The Hesse heirlooms, including fistfuls of diamonds, rubies and emeralds, gemmed bracelets, solid gold service pieces, a red plush autograph book first signed in 1603, and a gold-bound Bible-a wedding gift of England's Queen Victoria to her daughter and Crown Prince Frederick William of Prussia-were on exhibit in the Army Public Relations director's office in Washington. The Army valued them at $3,000,000. While newsmen stared and photographed them, the Army told fantastic bits & pieces of the story of their recovery...
...recently on Portland Street (London's auto row), a man had just pulled his new Sunbeam over to the curb to greet a friend when a dealer raced out of a nearby showroom and offered ?200 above list price for the car. The prize was worth the chase. A 1946 Armstrong worth ?991 new is worth ?1,850 ($7,640) secondhand, a ?352 Ford is worth ?710 ($2,932) once it has been used. So Britons are paying for 1) low production, 2) their export program which sends half their cars abroad for sale...
Alfred E. Chase...