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Essential details of G.C.A. and its operation are available in the current issue of the Bendix Radio Engineer, a quarterly published by one of the equipment manufacturers...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: G.C.A. | 1/14/1946 | See Source »

...BENDIX AVIATION CORP. Sales-smart Bendix was busy during the war lining up a nationwide distribution organization while its factories were spouting $2.8 billion of war goods. Soon these distributors will have something to sell. Bendix plants making auto parts will be in mass production by late fall. New type AM and FM radio sets can roll off the assembly lines immediately...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: RECONVERSION: Facts & Figures, Aug. 20, 1945 | 8/20/1945 | See Source »

...Juan Quilligan (20th Century-Fox), a study in the farcical consequences of bigamy, examines the temptations which beset a none-too-bright barge captain (William Bendix) at each end of the Brooklyn-Utica haul. In Brooklyn, Captain Quilligan falls for a barmaid (Joan Blondell) who laughs and sings just like his sainted mother (rest her soul). In Utica, he is hopelessly enmeshed by a homebody (Mary Treen) whose cooking is more wonderful than anything the captain has tasted in the ten years since mother passed on (rest her soul...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The New Pictures, Jul. 30, 1945 | 7/30/1945 | See Source »

With a star-spangled dramatis personae including Fred Allen, Jack Benny, Victor Moore, William Bendix, Jerry Colonna, and Robert Benchley, "It's in the Bag" sounds like a funnyman version of the Warner and MGM gargantuas, but is instead a movie version of the Texaco Star Theater, complete with Mrs. "No-o-o-o?" Noosbaum...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: MOVIEGOER | 6/14/1945 | See Source »

...respects more rational than the one it ribs, and any amount more entertaining-a world in which children are hideously overeducated and essentially very sinister; lawyers (notably Cruikshank-like John Carradine) are crooks who will not only not stop at murder but prefer to begin with it; gangsters (William Bendix et al.) hold stockholders' meetings as punctiliously as any other big businessmen; the high priest of the mysteries exhumed by Sigmund Freud is a wild-eyed goon (Jerry Colonna) who can't stop slapping his own face. There is also a capitalist (Robert Benchley) who appears...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cinema: New Picture, Apr. 23, 1945 | 4/23/1945 | See Source »

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