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President after Coolidge
Answer for the clue "President after Coolidge ", 6 letters:
hoover
Alternative clues for the word hoover
Word definitions for hoover in dictionaries
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
hoover \hoover\ v. t. to clean with a vacuum cleaner. [slang] Syn: vacuum, vacuum-clean.
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Hoover (c. 1971 – July 25, 1985) was a harbour seal who was able to imitate basic human speech . He was an orphan when he was found by George and Alice Swallow in Maine in 1971. George and Alice decided to take him home. At first the baby seal didn't want ...
Usage examples of hoover.
Hoover that allows the novel to comment on the way global politics become aestheticized, so much so that the history of the Cold War nearly disappears from American consciousness.
In the entire twelve-year history of FBI mistakes leading up to September 11, the fact that FBI headquarters ignored that desperate eleventh-hour plea from its own field agents is perhaps the greatest indictment of the house that Hoover built.
The Hoover incumbency would be undercut as a factor in the forthcoming Berrigan and Ellsberg trials.
Chapter Fifty-One Monday morning, I got a call to meet Kyle Craig and Betsey Cavalierre at the Hoover Building on Tenth Street and Pennsylvania Avenue.
Hoover would have her packed her off to Cluj before she could blab her part in the downfall of Public Enemy Number One.
This is a selection of materials from the papers of just one leading counterinsurgent Charles Bohannan, that remain under wraps, in the Bohannan Papers, Hoover Institution Archive.
Four minutes after the video downlink was detected, she heard the Hoover go to full military power, the roller-coaster rattle of the steam catapult, and the final surprisingly soft thud as the catapult piston reached the end of its run and tossed the S-3 into the air.
It was here that Hoover forsook pen for pencil, which made the going extremely rough.
Edgar Hoover shaking hands with a somewhat less grey-haired Richard Haines, and then he was being waved to his seat.
Then there were the Hoovers - the ivory-white Hoovers flushed with all the benefits of a doting society, the people of intelligence and position who slid through life plucking up the breaks as they dropped in their laps - who had nothing better to do with their lives than indulge their fantasies with harebrained schemes and crackpot notions and then feel they had the legal right to inflict their sick delusions on decent, law-abiding people.
Hoover was an excellent Latinist, and had a degree in geology from Stanford.
JaneAnn had nearly worn holes in the Purves and Purves rugs with her enthusiastic Hoovering, and almost shone away the protective laminate from the polished concrete floors.
Sal Capone an Sherbert Hoover come lopin down the line, growlin an snappin they teeth at ever one in sight.
Hoover five months earlier, on May 23, 1966, asking for access to the spectrographic analysis of the bullet allegedly used in the assassination and the various bullet fragments, clearly the most basic evidence, but not in the printed evidence.
And leading me deeper into the thicket of cabinets and closets and breakfronts and highboys, the rocking chairs and hall trees and bookcases, Helen Hoover Boyle says she needs to tell me a little story.