Word: pots
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...Mediterranean stove, evidently waiting for the Vienna chefs to season their Balkan stew (see p. 24), for cooler weather in the Egyptian desert, for the end of the rains in Ethiopia, for Germany to hamstring the British at home or join in a Southern Theatre attack. To keep the pot respectably warm, the Italian Air Force performed a few missions...
...would-be invader from Europe, there are two obvious approaches for an attack on the U. S. One is the Caribbean islands (TIME, July 29). The other is eastern Canada. On the two following pages, TIME presents a map of eastern Canada and the North Atlantic coast. A mixing pot for villainous weather through the winter months, it is nevertheless an area in which military operations were carried on, winter and summer, before and during the Revolution and the War of 1812. Over its forested stretches commercial aircraft today operate regularly in summer, with more difficulty in winter. Year-round...
...USUALLY SO ACCURATE THEREFORE WOULD GREATLY APPRECIATE YOUR SETTING RECORD STRAIGHT REGARDING "PASTOR HALL" ARTICLE ISSUE AUG. 12 REFERRING "POT O' GOLD" AS BEING PRODUCED BY QUICKIE-EXPERT SAMUEL BRONSTON. BRONSTON NOT CONNECTED IN ANY WAY WITH "POT O' GOLD," IT BEING PRODUCED PERSONALLY AND SOLELY BY MYSELF. PRODUCTION WILL BE TOP "A" WITH GEORGE MARSHALL DIRECTING AND HARRY TUGEND WRITING SCRIPT...
...Roosevelt Roosevelt (burden: Pastor Hall is more important than Hitler), is the first picture presented to the U. S. by James Roosevelt. Globe Productions, in which Jimmy is associated with onetime Universal Executive Henry Henigson, has a franchise to distribute pictures through United Artists. Its next release will be Pot o' Gold (based on the radio program), being produced in Hollywood by a Rumanian-born quickie expert. Samuel Bronston...
Died. Colonel His Highness Sir Sri Krishnaraja Wadiyar Bahadur, G. C.S.I., G.B.E., Maharaja of Mysore, second richest man in India; of heart disease; in Bangalore. A rigid ascetic (his late brother was a dancer-ogling, jazz-crooning rum-pot), the childless Maharaja denied himself meat, fish, eggs, tobacco, alcohol, but kept a fleet of 80 limousines, had a miniature train to serve food to the scores of guests who usually surrounded his banquet table...