OCR Text |
Show BRIEFS: Berlin: (by radio heard in New York) The world famous broadcaster broadcast-er "Lord Haw-Haw, Nazi-minded Englishman, had been banned from the air." Capetown, S. A.: Gen. Jan Christian Chris-tian Smuts again had called for America's entry into the war "hands and feet," to insure a quicker victory vic-tory and save the world from exhaustion. ex-haustion. Tokyo: Pacific tension was reported re-ported again high, with Japan breaking break-ing off relations with Poland, engaging en-gaging in grand maneuvers off Indo-China, Indo-China, seizing factories in Saigon, and issuing warnings to the people of Thailand that they were letting the U. S. and Britain make dupes of them. London: Scores of Americans, to be employed by Britain in operation of the army's radiolocator which tells which way planes are coming and gives other accurate data for defense against aerial invasion had arrived and had gone to work. |