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Word: stowaways (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...York Herald Tribune's Columnist Roscoe Drummond, far from being acclaimed "with enthusiasm and a determination to pick them up and show that the states really want to reverse the tide of political power which flows to Washington, seemed to be about as popular as a stowaway at the captain's ball." Said Pennsylvania's Democratic Governor George Leader (who is prohibited by law from running for re-election): "I don't think the states are doing a very good job with the things they have-education, mental health and a multitude of other things." Connecticut...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE STATES: From Omelet to Eggshell | 7/8/1957 | See Source »

John W. Hurst '56, who successfully reached England as a stowaway this summer, will go on trial in New York City this morning for violating the Federal Stowaway Act. He is subject to a maximum sentence of a $1,000 fine and a year's imprisonment...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Stowaway Hurst, Done in by Yalie, Has Trial Today | 10/14/1955 | See Source »

Imaginary, too, are the Phragians whom Stewart uses to illustrate the city's neatly Spenglerian life cycle. Archias arrives with the first settlers as a boy stowaway. Ragged and kinless, he carries on his forehead the scar of a cut made as an identification mark during the sack of his unknown native city. Grown prosperous and middle-aged in the hilltop village of Phrax, he fathers Bion, who appears later in the chronicle as a sturdy citizen of a city that is still raw but has years of greatness ahead. Bion's son Callias, heir to wealth, enters...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: City That Never Was | 8/29/1955 | See Source »

Four hundred sailors, each with an acceptable silhouette, assembled on deck while the officers poked into every recess of three destroyers (the U.S.S. Hollister, Isbell and Knox). In a steel locker near the after stack of the Hollister, an officer found the stowaway: blue-eyed, barefooted, 24-year-old Elizabeth D. Talk, rigged in pale blue pedal pushers and a well-filled blouse...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: National Affairs: A Shape in the Dawn | 8/1/1955 | See Source »

...when his back is turned. Captain Cwiklinski, master of the Polish passenger liner Batory, was not looking one May day in Manhattan six years ago, when a baldish little man with glasses came aboard on a 25? visitor's ticket and sailed as a stowaway. Unlike most stowaways, he soon dug first-class passage money from his pocket. He also owned up to the name of Gerhart Eisler. For unwittingly aiding in the escape of a key Communist agent, badly wanted in the U.S., Captain Cwiklinski got involved in a nasty, three-cushion carom on the international billiard table...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Billiards on the High Seas | 1/24/1955 | See Source »

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