Word: lende
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1940-1949
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...temptation to saturate a war story with a strong solution of the spectacular, Korda deserves great praise. The success of this film hinges upon its able, all-British cast of Eric Portman, Hugh Williams, Godfrey Tearle, and Googie Withers, as well as the fact that its authentic action shots lend to the entire plot a reality that is more interesting than Errol Flynn fighting a thousand Nazis single-handed...
Philosophic General Hsiung, who at 50 has the bland face of a schoolboy, departed with his usual smile, said only that he and Franklin Roosevelt had discussed the "Pacific situation." Was it true that he was being recalled because of dissatisfaction with United Nations cooperation and the trickle of Lend-Lease aid? The General replied tactfully: "We should never be satisfied unless our enemy is completely defeated...
...richest men in Yugoslavia, and the man who signed the U.S. master Lend-Lease agreement in 1942, Ninchich was a sacrifice in a Cabinet reshuffle designed to "achieve unity among various groups inside the country and to strengthen the Government." His place was taken by another oldster, Premier Slobodan Yovanovich, who announced that General Draja Mihailovich would continue (from inside embattled Yugoslavia) as Minister...
Last week Dr. Bachman was working on the first survey ever made of China's whole medical problem. Dr. Bachman's other job is "not to create new projects but to maintain existing ones which are dying from stress, shortages, inflation and war." Since Lend-Lease and the American Red Cross have taken over sending medical supplies to China the Bureau's efforts have been concentrated on three projects: > An Emergency Medical Service Training School at Tuyunkuan, Kweiyang plans to have a branch for each of the nine war areas, has five so far. To the schools...
Central point about the new products is that the food has not only been dehydrated (TIME, Feb. 16) for the removal of water, but has also been "debulked" (compressed) for the removal of air. The advantages in transportation are enormous-inspiring to Lend-Leasers, Army rationers and those who foresee that, after the war, the U.S. will feed great areas of the world. Compression adds another 30-90% to the great savings in bulk already attained by dehydration (many foods naturally average nine-tenths water). Equally important, the Cellophane-wrapped, dry-pressed foods are less likely to spoil, more amenable...