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...speaking terms with everyone from Stalin to Winston Churchill. His now completed mission to China, culminating in his "plague on both your houses" report has perhaps foreshadowed the first favorable turn in our relations with China since the mission of the another general (a civilian brand), Patrick J. Hurley...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Mr. Byrnes and General Marshall | 1/8/1947 | See Source »

...Washington, Department of Agriculture officials announced that the border gates, recently reopened, had been shut again. This time it was a grand slam. To guard U.S. herds, the border might remain closed "for several years." For Mexico's brand-new Government, that was a real jolt. The half million head of cattle that annually went to U.S. markets had meant prosperity for the northern states; and cattle export duties had made up a big chunk of the federal budget...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: MEXICO: Grand Slam | 1/6/1947 | See Source »

Another grandiose Social Credit idea turned out last week to be bankrupt. In Alberta's Supreme Court, Chief Justice Horace Harvey and his four colleagues ruled that Premier Ernest Charles Manning's sweeping "Bill of Rights" was unconstitutional. The court's reason: Alberta's brand of Social Credit would infringe on Dominion control of banking...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Canada: ALBERTA: Blue Skies | 12/30/1946 | See Source »

...book, "the designer experiences, perceives, analyzes, organizes, symbolizes, synthesizes." Rand is against "using Picasso to sell underwear," believes that "to design a liquor ad you should know what it is to feel convivial." The hardest part of his work is to find the symbol which will differentiate one brand of liquor, cosmetics, or fabrics from all the rest. (Examples: Rand's Coronet Brandy waiter, whose head is shaped like a brandy glass, his Stafford Fabrics' patchwork horse...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Esthetic Ads | 12/23/1946 | See Source »

...voted $1,000 first prize to Cape Cod Abstractionist Karl Knaths for a knotty grey-green what-is-it entitled Gear (TIME, Oct. 21). But when the gallerygoers' ballots were all in, they had voted, as they did in 1944, for conservative Cox. Cox's highly stylized brand of the bucolic-a plush wheat field under an exploding cloud-had the same kind of crowd appeal as the seascapes of the late Frederick J. Waugh (Waugh won the Carnegie popularity prize five years running...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: It Must Be Bad | 12/16/1946 | See Source »

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