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March 1943
17 27

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Sphere, The

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England

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The Sphere

A PITCHED BATTLE in ENGLAND: During the Largest Offensive Exercises Yet Carried Out by the Home Forces

... I A PITCHED BATTLE in ENGLAND During the Largest Offensive Exercises Yet Carried Out by the Home Forces GENERAL SIR BERNARD PAGET (C.-in-C. Home Forces second from right), with General Andrews (in command of the U.S. Troops in Europe in centre), and the King of Greece (on left) listening to details of progress from a General in the field ARMY AND AIR WORKED AS ONE IN THIS GREAT MANtEUVRE. ...

Published: Saturday 27 March 1943
Newspaper: The Sphere
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 304 | Page: Page 27 | Tags: Graphic  Photographs 

RUSES THAT SHAPE BATTLES: Some of the Tricks in This, and the Last, War which Have Fooled the Enemy High Command

... RUSES THAT SHAPE BATTLES Some of the Tricks in This, and the Last, War which Have Fooled the Enemy High Command Described by FERDINAND TUOHY THERE was a refreshing whiff about Admiral Cunningham's tale of how he chose as golf partner on the eve of Matapan the Japanese Naval Attache in the Middle East-- the blunt edge of the Axis. One can almost read the flash that must have been sent to Rome ...

Published: Saturday 27 March 1943
Newspaper: The Sphere
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1696 | Page: Page 8 | Tags: Photographs 

From the WORLD'S BATTLE FRONTS

... HOW THE GERMANS ATTACK ON THE RUSSIAN FRONT A raiding party of the enemy mopping up near Kharkov. In the house, a small Soviet reconnaissance unit had taken cover. German soldiers, supported by an armoured car, are moving up to attack it. This picture has reached London from Germany via a neutral country ONE OF THE MOST REMARKABLE SALVAGE FEATS IN MARITIME HISTORY This was recently ...

Published: Saturday 27 March 1943
Newspaper: The Sphere
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 482 | Page: Page 15 | Tags: Graphic  Photographs 

Graphic

... THE MAN WHO COMMANDS THE ALLIED FLEET IN THE NORTH AFRICA BATTLE ZONE: A CLOSE-UP OF ADMIRAL OF THE FLEET SIR ANDREW CUNNINGHAM in his office at Headquarters, where most of his time is now spent yyhen the history of the present war comes to be written, the name of Sir Andrew Cunningham will always be associated with the Mediterranean Sea, and with British domination of those waters. Since the ...

Published: Saturday 27 March 1943
Newspaper: The Sphere
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 246 | Page: Page 3 | Tags: Graphic  Photographs 

The TRAGEDY of the PRESIDENT COOLIDGE: Which struck a mine in the South Pacific whilst acting as a U.S. troopship

... The TRAGEDY of the PRESIDENT COOLIDGE Which struck a mine in the South Pacific whilst acting as a U.S. troopship The President Coolidge before the war was one of the world's luxury liners. After the entry of the U.S., this 22,000-ton vessel became a troop transport as such she was engaged on operations in the South Pacific, when she struck a mine off a small island at a moment when she was ...

Published: Saturday 27 March 1943
Newspaper: The Sphere
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 442 | Page: Page 5 | Tags: Graphic  Photographs 

FIGHTING TANKS IN TUNISIA

... Correspondents who have been inspecting the Tunisian battlefront have commented on the varied nature of the fighting terrain. The northernmost section is, in many ways, the strangest. Bounded by hills which drop down to the sea as steep cliffs on the north, this area reaches southwards to the Beja Valley, where the country changes to more rolling hills and shallow valleys. The Sejenane area ...

Published: Saturday 27 March 1943
Newspaper: The Sphere
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 965 | Page: Page 16, 17 | Tags: Illustrations  Photographs 

The FRIGATE RETURNS to the ROYAL NAVY: An Historic Name which is Being Revived to Describe a New Class of ..

... The FRIGATE RETURNS to the ROYAL NAVY An Historic Name which is Being Revived to Describe a New Class of Bigger Corvette with Heavier Armour IN his review of the work of the Royal Navy in the House of Commons on March 3. Mr. A. V. Alexander, First Lord of the Admiralty, made an announcement which must have been welcomed by many Naval officers. He said in the course of a long and very ...

Published: Saturday 27 March 1943
Newspaper: The Sphere
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1158 | Page: Page 18, 19 | Tags: Photographs 

The BLACK BERET: The First of Two Articles Dealing with the Work of the Royal Armoured Corps

... The BLACK BERET- The First of Two Articles Dealing with the Work of the Royal Armoured Corps. By CHARLES GRAVES THE task of mechanising the Cavalry and Yeomanry fell to the lot of Mr. Leslie Hore- Belisha, as Secretary of State for War, in April 1939. The Royal Tank Corps had been formed towards the end of the last war, but the initiative in tank fighting had been allowed to go by default. So ...

Published: Saturday 27 March 1943
Newspaper: The Sphere
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 1421 | Page: Page 28 | Tags: Photographs 

The WOMEN of BRITAIN at WORK

... ^HBj£3Ciirame' BOMBED CHILDREN FROM LEWISHAM RECUPERATE IN COUNTRY MANSIONS Some of the pirls at Gravcombe House heloine to move a chicken run GIRLS WHO ARE BUILDING COMMANDO BARGES IN A BRITISH SHIPYARD Women workers filing the edges of the portholes of one of the Tank Landing Craft under construction in Scotland THE NEW GOOD CONDUCT BADGE OF THE W.R.N.S. which has just been issued I This is ...

Published: Saturday 27 March 1943
Newspaper: The Sphere
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 482 | Page: Page 29 | Tags: Graphic  Photographs 

SOLDIERS with WINGS: The Work of the New Glider Pilot regiment

... THE glider pilot is both soldier and airman. He must not only be able to ride the winds: his knowledge of navi gation must be such that he can, with unfailing regularity. Pinpoint the exact position of objectives and land his craft hard by points to be stormed. And his purpose is not restricted to the ferrying of troops. As the glider swoops earthwards in a steep dive to bump and slew to a ...

Russia's Arctic Door

... way The Conditions our Seamen Endure on the Northern Convoy Routes FOR Britons who can walk to the coast and stand in the next parish to America. who can cross the Thames, Mersey or Clyde and look down on unclosable highways to the world's four corners, it is almost impossible to visualise the position of Russia. This vast country, larger than Canada and Australia together, now has in ...

The DEVELOPMENT of the MORTAR: Which is Now Being Largely Used by the Infantry in Many Theatres of War

... IT was a most accurate weapon-- it could land a shell on a dime-- and it speedily put the fort out of action, remarked General Eisenhower of the American infantry mortar as used in the operations at Oran; and one more tribute was paid to a piece of ordnance that has played a leading, albeit an inconspicuous part in every campaign of this war. rirst in German hands across r ranee the mortar ...

Published: Saturday 27 March 1943
Newspaper: The Sphere
County: London, England
Type: Illustrated | Words: 753 | Page: Page 26 | Tags: Photographs