Word: journey
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...millionaire French planemaker; Squadron Leader Augustus H. Orlebar, holder of the world's speed record (357.7 m. p. h.); Flight Lieut. H. R. D. Waghorn, winner of the Schneider Cup (1929). Wingless heroes included Herbert Wilbur ("Bunny") Austin, British tennis player; Robert Cedric Sherriff, insurance broker, author of Journey's End; John L. Baird, inventor of the first practical television apparatus...
Pierre too, alas, loved (and in vain) a girl of his own home town. When Ann married his rival, Pierre cut a caper to hide his bleeding heart, took a job as soda-jerker to study character, saved his pay for his triumphal journey to Manhattan. On the eve of Pierre's departure old Tony appeared with a play he had written, read it to newly-married Ann. Tony's play, in Seven Keys to Baldpate style, goes on with the story from that point. It shows Pierre at the last minute sacrificing his career for Ann's sake, giving...
...Africa there may well develop a second great nitrate region. Last year a British professor roamed about over 10,000 sq. mi. of southwest Africa, found traces of nitrate throughout his journey, "a strong resemblance to the conditions prevalent in Chile." Should anything come of this, Africa may threaten Chile's nitrates as seriously as it is now threatening Chile's copper. Last year copper and nitrates together formed 88% of total Chilean exports, copper coming to $105,489,000, nitrates...
...Dawn Patrol (First National). People who are amused at the way rival producers imitate each other's masterpieces, do not always realize the salutary effect of this convention of plagiarism on the industry at large. Undoubtedly The Dawn Patrol was influenced, even frankly inspired, by Journey's End. Undoubtedly also it is a better picture, because its devisers have stuck to their model, than it would have been if they had depended on independent inspiration. It is a War picture dealing with aviators, but the usual framework of such efforts has been drawn into a tense believable story...
...Journey's End. In Santa Maria, Calif, last week, Major Charles Kingsford-Smith presented his world-girdling monoplane Southern Cross to Capt. G. Allan Hancock, wealthy banker and oil operator, who had bought and loaned the plane to him for the California-Australia flight of 1928. When the Southern Cross landed safely in Australia, Capt. Hancock cabled Major Kingsford-Smith full title to it. Capt. Hancock, who took up flying as a result of his association with the Southern Cross crew, later gave Santa Maria an airport, established there an air college...