Looks like she could be a distant relative of the Domino Lady…
Tag: 1944
The Desert Hawk, 1944
Evil Hassan slips back into his native land of Ahad and plots to overthrow his twin bother, Kasim, who has just been crowned the Caliph.(IMDb)
Linda Darnell, 1944
Pin-up photos for Yank, the Army Weekly, 1944
Pocket Guide to Korea, 1944
Phantom Lady, 1944
“It is mostly a story about a young woman and a woman’s hat.
Miss Raines, made quite plain for the purpose, is the young woman, in love with a guiltless man condemned to die for the murder of his wife, because no one, including the jurors, believes his alibi that he was with a nameless woman wearing a silly hat at the time the crime was wrought.
Motivated by love for her man, and bulwarked by a stubborn conviction, typically feminine , in his innocence, Ella starts a race against the hangman. Undismayed by the seemingly hopelessness of her task, as women seldom are, she seeks to track down the “Phantom Lady” who appears meanwhile to have been swallowed in oblivion, and to prove that the doomed man, who is Alan Curtis, wasn’t lying about the funny hat, after all.” (Review copy from newspapers in 1944)
Japanese Army Uniforms, 1944
NEWSMAP – Japanese Army Uniform Guide Poster, 1944
[United States.] Army Service Forces. Morale Services Division. Army Information Branch. Newsmap. Monday, February 7, 1944 : week of January 27 to February 3, 230th week of the war, 112th week of U.S. participation, poster, February 7, 1944; [Washington, D.C.]. University of North Texas Libraries, Digital Library, digital.library.unt.edu; crediting UNT Libraries Government Documents Department.
Burma, February 7, 1944
[United States.] Army Service Forces. Morale Services Division. Army Information Branch. Newsmap. Monday, February 7, 1944 : week of January 27 to February 3, 230th week of the war, 112th week of U.S. participation, poster, February 7, 1944; [Washington, D.C.]. University of North Texas Libraries, Digital Library, digital.library.unt.edu; crediting UNT Libraries Government Documents Department.
The Case of the Black-Eyed Blonde, 1944
Pocket Guide to India, 1944
YOU and your outfit have been assigned one of the most important military missions ever given to American soldiers—the task of driving the Japanese back to Tokyo.
In this global war it is not enough that you should be able to destroy or immobilize all who are your nation’s enemies; you must be able to win the respect and good will
of all who are not.
Right now the world is our workshop and whether we, and the other United Nations, can get it back in running order again depends on how much we know about the materials in it—meaning the people. By winning their confidence and convincing them of our good faith, we shall find many short cuts to success over the enemy and lay the foundations of international understanding that are essential to building a worth-while, enduring peace.
In India your job is doubly difficult. To drive the Japanese armies out of Burma where they now threaten invasion of Assam, India’s^easternmost province, is a military operation of sizable proportions. To keep them on the run, out of Indo-China and China itself, is still more formidable.