Word: licensee
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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The morning was fresh, cold and clear. At the Poughkeepsie railroad station, a few loafers, hands in pockets, gazed blankly at the big open touring car (license District of Columbia 101), its tan top up against the chill. The country's first citizen, bundled in a grey topcoat, sat...
Almost every year, when the leaves and the ballots are falling, the U. S. Government takes out a license, takes down a fowling piece, and goes gunning for election frauds. The bag is never very notable, but the bang-bang is heartening and salutary. Last week the loudest shooting came...
Arise, My Love (Paramount) turns the neat trick of setting a comedy against the background of current events in Europe. Its principal device is to hustle a carefree American aviator (Irish-born Ray Milland) and a beauteous American reporter (French-born Claudette Colbert) through a series of romantic interludes spiced...
For these signed up in the regular half-year course, flying and ground school is already well under way. Only one group of ten, supposed to fly at the east Boston airport, has been held up. Commercial airlines complained because of the risk to mainliners, and license to proceed with...
No fatuous sugar-daddy is O. E. Eisenschiml. Philosopher and humane eccentric, he is also a successful businessman. Born in Vienna, he emigrated to the U. S. in 1901, worked for six months cleaning toilets in a Pittsburgh steel mill, eventually became chief chemist of American Linseed Co. at $15...