Word: pas
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...biographer Gerstle Mack described her differently: "She never allowed herself to lapse into vulgarity. ... Her friends were generally writers or artists, cultivated men in whose company she felt at ease." Lautrec immortalized Avril in numerous poses: as a Moulin Rouge spectator, in conventional garb leaving the cabaret, dancing a pas seul with her skirts flung high to reveal legs of startling thinness. Lautrec's most famous poster, Le Divan Japonais, featured Avril with her flaming red hair under a large black bonnet, listening with a toppered escort to a song by the disease, Yvette Guilbert...
...ceded provinces-Nord and Pas-de-Calais-fortifications were being built and the last French inhabitants evacuated. Five destroyers, two tugs and many French merchantmen were being taken over by German crews to carry and convoy supplies to German forces in Tunisia. A 140-man German mission arrived in Paris to inventory French industry and arrange to increase poverty-stricken France's already big exports to Germany...
...Faux Pas...
...Faux Pas. The critics, upset by defeats in the Orient, not only made charges of British bungling and greed, but also attacked the Government's entire conception of the world crisis. Countless Britons had been shocked to hear Anthony Eden, on his return from Russia, declare: "The trouble with Hitler . . . was not that he was a Nazi at home; the trouble with him was that he would not stay at home." To many this sounded as though their Foreign Secretary, and by inference others in the Government, had a curiously warped notion of Naziism...
Foreign Secretary Eden tried to wriggle out of his faux pas by saying that he fully realized that the "essence of the [Nazi] creed and the essence of German practice for the last 100 years is that they are aggressive animals." Daily Mail Columnist Hannen Swaffer jumped on this with the question: "When did Eden find this out? On Tuesday when criticism appeared? On Wednesday when M.P.s of all parties began to murmur...