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...least a majority, won only 36 to Labor's 64. Other local elections throughout the country confirmed Labor's current lead with the electorate. The outlook for the Tories in the forthcoming general elections (the Conservatives' present fiveyear mandate expires Nov. 5), changed from dark grey to deep black...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Great Britain: Grey to Black for the Tories | 4/17/1964 | See Source »

...point last week, some 10,000 political prisoners had been rounded up -4,000 in Rio alone. In Guanabara Bay, a white luxury liner and grey navy transport were pressed into service as temporary jails. As the purges spread, the military clamped tight censorship on all news. Long-distance phone calls were monitored, government troops moved into wire service offices, edited stories and poked through files...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Brazil: Toward Profound Change | 4/17/1964 | See Source »

There, amid the grey agate wasteland of the stock tables, dwells one of journalism's newest specialists, the advertising columnist. He stalks a beat so narrow and unnewsworthy that most papers prefer to do without him entirely. Of the handful of such men regularly kept at work in Chicago, Los Angeles, Philadelphia, Denver, San Francisco and Detroit, only five get a daily airing. And four of these-Bart of the Times, Kaselow of the Tribune, Charles Sievert of the World-Telegram and Jack O'Dwyer of the Journal-American-appear in New York City,*where the Madison Avenue...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Navel-Gazing in Wasteland | 4/17/1964 | See Source »

...pieces deal with race relations; the fourth is on Jews in the Soviet Union. Every issue of Mosaic ever published has probably had a similar article. More importantly, a certain dullness prevades the magazine. The prose stays consistently at a drab, B-level. Nothing sparkles, nothing excites between these grey covers...

Author: By Steven V. Roberts, | Title: Mosaic | 4/17/1964 | See Source »

Revisions in theology start inconspicuously enough-usually as footnote-laden articles in grey, learned journals with modest circulations. Future church historians may well date a profound change in Roman Catholic thinking on marriage from the current issue of a scholarly Belgian periodical called Ephemerides Theologicae Lovanienses, There, the Rev. Louis Janssens, 56, a respected professor of moral theology at the University of Louvain, cautiously endorsed oral contraceptive pills as a legitimate means of family limitation for Catholic couples...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Roman Catholics: A New View on Birth Control | 4/10/1964 | See Source »

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