Word: cliffords
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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Alfred L. Atherton, Jr., William P. Bartlett, William E. Bright III, Jerry M. Brown, Gregory N. Bruxelles, Norbert T. Byrnes, Francis Henry Caskin III, Herbert H. Caswell, Jr., Robert W. Clifford, Leonard Cummings, Paul F. Delahoyde, Robert E. Desautels, John W. Ellison, John D. Eusden, John C. Faulkner III, Dan II. Fenn, Jr., John W. Frenning, Ralph M. Golfstein, Daniel Gorenstein, Donald Harting, Walter S. Hayward, Jr., Thomas T. Hoffman, Richard A. Houghton, William C. Howard, Joseph M. Hurley...
...howitzers mounted on more modern carriages, a larger number of 75 mm. guns, a few more than a hundred aircraft. There were no automatic rifles in sight, nor a single anti-tank gun. They were not needed. There were no tanks. The President asked Major General Clifford Powell about the equipment of the 44th Division. The Major General replied : "It is pretty good, what there is of it. But we are using broomsticks for machine guns and rain pipes for mortars." The President laughed and said that everyone seemed to be in the same boat...
Touring first-aid posts and other stations were the Taverners, a first-rate amateur company which used to play in pubs, giving plays by Shaw, Clifford Bax, Ivor Brown. Soon to open as the Uniform Theatre is the Garrick on Charing Cross Road, which will admit the boy or girl friend of all war workers. Encouraging theatre attendance in Brighton and Ports mouth is a rule: those who have ticket stubs for cinema or theatre are exempt from the curfew...
...Charles Dundas, the departing Governor of the Bahamas, who has now been named Governor of Uganda, British African protectorate, planned to slip away from Nassau this week before the Wind sors should arrive. London dispatches said that Sir Bede Clifford, who from 1932 to 1937 was a successful and popular Governor of the Bahamas, is about to be sent back to Nassau, reportedly to assist the Duke with his work as Governor...
This summer The Aldrich Family will once again replace Benny, offering instead of his unctuous patter the best juvenile program that has ever appeared on the air. Written by amiable Playwright Clifford Goldsmith, featuring 21 -year-old, crack-voiced prodigy Ezra Stone, The Aldrich Family will continue to relate the trials & tribulations of adolescent Henry Aldrich, who first turned up in Manhattan in 1937 in the George Abbott comedy What a Life. Besides The Aldrich Family, radio's summer substitute fare (on Eastern Daylight Saving Time) will include: >Abbott & Costello, oldtime vaudevillians, who will split with Mr. District Attorney...