Word: gander
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Married. Gloria Swanson, chic, sharp-jawed silent film star (Male and Female), who gives her age as 45, chief attraction of the short-lived Broadway play, A Goose for the Gander (TIME, Feb. 5); and William Mellon Davey, 52, Wall Street yachtsman; she for the fifth time, he for the third; in Union City, N.J. Previous Swanson husbands: Wallace Beery, Herbert Somborn, the Marquis de la Falaise de la Coudraye, Michael Farmer...
...would have a say in the disposition of the island's enormous undeveloped resources (including those in virtually unexplored Labrador). She could still oversee Newfoundland's strategic command of the sea and air approaches to the Western Hemisphere and the aviation bases at Goose Bay in Labrador, Gander on the East Coast, the U.S.-leased airport at Stephenville. These were reasons enough for Britain to keep her hand in Newfoundland affairs; why, as Newfoundland's trustee, she refused to commit herself on postwar air rights in Newfoundland territory at the Chicago air conference...
...keep of U.S. Senators and Representatives "to stay on the other side of the desk from." Appended to prominent names on the list were such descriptive names as "Garter Snapper"; "Revolving Door Romeo" (he "gets into the same compartment of a revolving door [and] . . . pinches"); "Elevator Lothario"; "Gooser Gander"; and "Desk Athlete" ("He jumps. See him only with your gang...
Stinky, on the screen, becomes Pinky (Ted Donaldson), a plump little boy who, for all his talents, looks too much like a child actor. Curley does all his workouts in a shoe box, and though dozens of his screen colleagues watch him constantly, the tantalized audience never gets a gander. The agent (Cary Grant) is no pathetic shoe-stringer. He is a dapper Broadway impresario in danger of losing his theater. When he loses it, Cary is solaced by meeting Pinky's lush sister (Janet Blair). His slit-pussed sidekick (James Gleason), is perhaps the best member...
Last evening the Cambridge Summer Theatre presented, prior to Broadway, a sophisticated comedy by Harold J. Kennedy entitled "A Goose for the Gander," starring Gloria Swanson and Ralph Forbes. At first viewing the play seems to have rather slim chances of a Broadway run, but the plans at present are to exhibit it at other summer theatres and with a rewrite job that would eliminate a talky first act it could very easily become a very pleasant theatre experience. At any rate, last night's opening audience enjoyed it immensely. In short, "A Goose for the Gander" is considerably above...