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...parliamentary inquiry had foiled the Government in an effort to depot him from Britain because of his criticisms of British policy while working on a student publication. The facts may be an index to Mr. Poulson's arguments. The facts appear in Hausard's Commons Debates, Vol. 344, pp. 1921-22, 2366. Mr. Poulson had been admitted to Great Britain as a student--a status legally precluding his employment for remuneration. In conformity with law the Home Office subsequently rejected an application to engage Mr. Poulson on a student paper for 200 pounds a year. Later, however, when Mr. Poulson...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: MAIL | 5/20/1940 | See Source »

Sirs: TIME has used the term "liberal Catholics" frequently. In issue of Jan. 29 it appears twice (on pp. 20 and 49). Will TIME please give me 1) its definition for term "liberal Catholics," 2) an example (not collective). As a life-long Catholic I am familiar with the terms "good Catholic," "practical Catholic," "bad Catholic," but a "liberal Catholic" is news to me. MARGARET BYRNES Albuquerque...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters, Feb. 19, 1940 | 2/19/1940 | See Source »

...Xmas Night Stars N. Y. Sun Jan 5, 1940: "His Naval plan that nearly prevented the World and Jap Wars" accd'g to Navy Leagues of London and U.S.A. in N. Y. Wld-Telg'm July 10, 39. N. Y. Her-Trib Feb 20, 39 edit'i pp like many of his articles have nat'l radio repetition by the commentators. Not only is he a correct and influential scientist (his interview in Nature mag June 1931 p 354 brot about Bartlett rescue expedition to Greenland) but he is one of our best stylists as writer and speaker, said Worcester...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE MAIL | 2/14/1940 | See Source »

...effort yet. In their eyes, the 1940-41 Budget was not merely too simple, it was too beautiful. It had everything, with the possible exception of a picture of Marlene Dietrich's legs on the cover. Not only was it longer than Gone With the Wind, (1,079 pp. to 1,037 pp.), but it seemed to them even more romantic...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: FISCAL: Romance v. Realism | 1/15/1940 | See Source »

...seems important to know who will rule us after we win this difficult war. Re articles in the Read Digest Dec. '39 p. 5, N.Y. Times June '30 F 9, N. Y. Post June 8 '34 N. Y. Sun Nov. 18 '33 edit'l pp. crities, incld'g lekes, Elmer Davis, U. S. Senator Fletcher seem to say that the plutocracy aided when necessary by an allied Proletariat machine rules completely in what Stuart Thomson (W.W. in East: N.).: U.S.A.: Authors: Canada: Interna'l London) calls "censorship by exclusion: autocracy by preemption" in publicity and opportunity in his effort...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: The Crime | 12/4/1939 | See Source »

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