Monday, Feb. 26, 1951
New Directions
In Paris, President Vincent Auriol prepared for his coming trip to the U.S. by making a third try at learning English. Mornings, he listens to British-made voice-training records; afternoons, he takes lessons from Radioman Paul Archinard, a graduate of Cleveland's East High School. Still unresolved: whether Auriol will say "here" or "heah."
Cinemactor Broderick (All the King's Men) Crawford got a double dose of publicity in the New York Herald Tribune. The news column reported that Crawford "would rather bruise 'em than love 'em on the screen . . . Most people seem to favor my rough treatment of heroines." On the opposite page, the Trib reported that
Crawford's wife had sued for separate maintenance, charging cruelty.
In Washington, Air Marshal Lord Tedder, 60, deputy to Eisenhower in SHAEF and Britain's most famed airman, announced his resignation as Britain's representative on the standing military committee of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. On returning to England, he will take up new, nonmilitary duties as vice chairman of the governors of BBC and chancellor of Cambridge University.
Scolded by British newspapers for a 2 1/2-month absence from her children, Princess Elizabeth flew back to London from a visit with her husband, on duty with the Royal Navy in Malta, held a nursery reunion with Prince Charles, 2, and Princess Anne, 6 months.
Revivalist Billy Graham saw rifts in the clouds: "Things are looking up. I am encouraged. The picture is brighter. At this time there are more Christians in Congress than in many years."
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