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Answering Professor Weisskopf's complaint that "all the wealth of observation, the results of years of study at Los Alamos and elsewhere, is locked away in the files of the Manhattan Project," and is blocking by its inaccessibility all the peaceful possibilities of atomic energy, Professor Wild reminded the large audience that "We have inherited a mutual distrust for Russia," on which the atomic secrecy is based...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Wild Calls World Security Solution To Atomic Control | 3/29/1946 | See Source »

...constitution forbids the drawing up of any common creed, and bars from membership extremely "liberal" churches which deny Christ's divinity. In 1944, the Council voted against admitting the Universalist Church (45,000 members). Other sizable nonmember churches: Unitarian, Southern Baptist, most Lutheran groups.' Chief complaint of most Baptist and Lutheran groups, who are basically fundamentalist, is that the Council itself is too modernist, leftist and pacifist...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: The Council | 3/18/1946 | See Source »

...case as usual had been damaged by U.S. practice. In Bavaria, one General Radovan Popovitch had organized 10,000 compatriots into a "Royal Yugoslav Army," rented some of them out to the U.S. Army. Washington ordered these mercenaries dismissed. At week's end Vishinsky presented a Tito complaint against the use on the Italo-Yugoslav frontier of General Wladyslaw Anders' émigré Polish army-which is paid by the British...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE NATIONS: Spasm of Aggression | 2/25/1946 | See Source »

...names in Cleveland's big dailies in those days. The city's 36 nationality groups lived together as hostile neighbors. One day in 1926, Andrica called on Editor Louis B. Seltzer of the Scripps-Howard Press. He brandished a batch of scribbled items, registered a heavily accented complaint...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: The Broken-English Editor | 2/25/1946 | See Source »

Last week, grizzled, hard-bitten hard-rock miners came down out of Colorado's Rocky Mountains to Denver to try the latest treatment for the old complaint. At the University of Colorado's School of Medicine they bellied up to a six-foot-high box fitted with nozzles at mouth level. Putting a clamp on their noses and the nozzle in their mouths, they breathed in & out through the tubes. Newcomers started at five minutes every day; veterans stood at the box from ten up to 20 minutes...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Dust for Dust | 2/25/1946 | See Source »

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