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Like an actor giving a cue, Perón appeared on the platform. He was wearing a coat. He had time only to say: "Shirtless companions" when the crowd shouted: "The coat, the coat!" Perón laughed, took it off and launched into a speech in his old rabble-rousing manner. He praised his regime, gently chided the workers for having stoned the building of oppositionist La Prensa on their way to the Plaza. Then, just before Government functionaries passed around cookies and candies as gifts from Evita, Perón declared the following day a holiday...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ARGENTINA: Holiday | 10/27/1947 | See Source »

Easy to Hate. Father and boss of Irma is 32-year-old Sy Howard, a breezy, gangly "threeheaded genius"* with a fondness for gaudy sport togs. In Irma's infancy, Sy handled everything, from the first line of script to the last directorial cue. Nowadays, he leaves much of the writing to scripters. But he still rules the show with a firm hand. "I'm an egomaniac," he says. "The cast hates me, but better they should hate me and give a good show than love me and we're off the air." For conventional radio comedy...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Radio: Dizzy Blonde | 10/20/1947 | See Source »

...show, she squealed, "I'm scared. It's too hard for me to read." And it is: her lines in the script are all typed in capital letters. There are other difficulties, too. Once, when the program was on the air, Sy waved a frantic cue at her from the director's box, and Marie dazedly waved back. Another time, when a special speech by Senator Taft forced cancellation of an Irma broadcast, Sy broke the bad news: "Senator Taft's coming on in place of us." Marie stamped her foot and pouted: "You promised...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Radio: Dizzy Blonde | 10/20/1947 | See Source »

...have the customary brawl on the customary cliff-top. You have but one guess who it is that falls into the briny deep. And that, in toto, is all there is to it. Just to make things a bit easier for the duller cinema-goer a convenient cue to the action has been supplied whenever anything important is about to happen the weather always produces a windstorm or a fog or a thunderstorm. When nothing important is going on the weather clears off, naturally. Garson's back and you can have...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Moviegoer | 10/7/1947 | See Source »

...Cue. But it was soon plain that Senator Martin was only sounding a rather obvious generality. Ed Martin, a longtime friend of steelmen, had allowed them to obtain advance notice of his remarks. As he spoke, newsmen already had copies of the steelmen's reply. Up rose U.S. Steel's President Benjamin Fairless to deliver it. "It is simply amazing to me," he said, "that anyone should suggest, by inference or otherwise, that U.S. Steel has a public-be-damned attitude. Our attitude is, and will always continue to be, just the reverse...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Turnabout | 9/22/1947 | See Source »

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