Word: visitores
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Being a native South Carolinian, and a frequent visitor to the old settlement ... I must inform you that Ninety Six is still in South Carolina...
...Justice Department denied the request of tall, sporty, 25-year-old Claudius Dornier Jr., son and namesake of the famed German plane designer, for a further extension of the visitor's permit on which he came to the U. S. 18 months ago. Before the war he got a job as a mechanic in a General Motors plant in Detroit, later lived quietly in Manhattan, but having failed to enroll in a U. S. university as he said he would, he got no more extensions from the Department of Justice, flew off to Venezuela...
...Philadelphia the only commercial gallery which tries to sell top-notch art is Carlen's, run by a crusading Indianan, Robert Carlen. Last week Carlen's opened a show of 50 works which, to a visitor not in on the secret, might have looked like the one-man show of a promising, well-trained youth, at home in a lot of media: oil, water color, gouache, lithography, etching, drawing. Actually, Carlen's exhibit was the work of two artists. They were identical twins: small, redheaded Freda & Ida Leibovitz...
...parting strands of his father's dream, Father Frank was kept from re-entering the U. S. after a weekend in Toronto. Reason: the Better Business Bureau tipped off the U. S. Immigration Service that he might have violated the law by going to Buffalo on a visitor's pass, starting a business venture. O'Hearn appealed. Insisting that the National Depository was no business venture but a "nonprofit" philanthropy, he offered to take in the U. S. Government as a partner. Latest students of the O'Hearn plan: reformers from the Attorney General...
...their own fortunes in search for three pirate hoards (worth perhaps $60,000,000) which legend has buried about its shores. Biggest find to date: one rusty pistol. So littered with gold diggers' picks & shovels is Cocos Island that it looks "like an abandoned WPA project." A frequent visitor: Franklin Roosevelt. At Cocos the President fishes, yarns gleefully about such plunder as he himself once dug for at another famous trove on Oak Island, Nova Scotia. Other items in Wilkins' index of rainbow ends...