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A general grab for "tin" hats, when spotters on the roof of the Windmill Theatre had warned cast and audience of the arrival of enemy aircraft overhead. The "Windmill" is the only West End shoio to remain open in London since the Start of the blitzkrieg, and roof-spotters are in constant attendance to warn audience and staff, day and night, of the approach of danger.

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19410214.2.11.6.1

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume CXXXI, Issue 38, 14 February 1941, Page 4

Word Count
65

A general grab for "tin" hats, when spotters on the roof of the Windmill Theatre had warned cast and audience of the arrival of enemy aircraft overhead. The "Windmill" is the only West End shoio to remain open in London since the Start of the blitzkrieg, and roof-spotters are in constant attendance to warn audience and staff, day and night, of the approach of danger. Evening Post, Volume CXXXI, Issue 38, 14 February 1941, Page 4

A general grab for "tin" hats, when spotters on the roof of the Windmill Theatre had warned cast and audience of the arrival of enemy aircraft overhead. The "Windmill" is the only West End shoio to remain open in London since the Start of the blitzkrieg, and roof-spotters are in constant attendance to warn audience and staff, day and night, of the approach of danger. Evening Post, Volume CXXXI, Issue 38, 14 February 1941, Page 4