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...present warfare in China is another stage in preparation for an attack on Russia," he asserted, for Japan wants Chinese raw materials, as well as a territorial wedge between China and the Soviets...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: RUSSIAN-JAPANESE WAR FORESEEN BY MARSHALL | 5/18/1938 | See Source »

...freak, after all-a child who could not feel pain. For the Bulletin told of two little Baltimore boys and a girl who were like the Spartan. Johns Hopkins' Drs. Frank Rodolph Ford & Lawson Wilkins discovered them, found that they stubbed toes, barked shins, broke bones, chewed fingers raw, lifted hot plates off stoves - all without complaint. Even when the tender Achilles tendon (just above the heel) "is squeezed these children make no protest and show no sign of pain," reported the doctors. When touched with a pin they can feel the difference between the point and the head...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Spartans | 5/9/1938 | See Source »

Depression. While sales of automobiles in the U. S. slumped notably, foreign demand remained firm; automotive exports in March last year totaled $28,819,000, this year $28,971,000. What the U. S. buys most from abroad is raw materials, but U. S. commodity prices are now at a two-year low; hence imports of non-ferrous metals were down from $19,547,000 in March 1937 to $9,641,000 this year, tin from $11,617,000 to $3,808,000, newsprint from...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Business: Imports Down, Exports Up | 5/9/1938 | See Source »

Modern psychology leans to the theory that the human mind is a piece of machinery, which can be measured by the way it acts on raw material. Thus the psychologists feed into the machine a set of questions called an intelligence test, lump the answers together as one product and weigh it, labeling the weight the I. Q. But one school of psychologists, believing the I. Q. is too crude a measure (like lumping apples, oranges and bananas all together and calling them fruit), has been trying to break up the mind into its separate parts. Last week the most...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Mind Cracked | 5/2/1938 | See Source »

...Chicago's International Amphitheatre last week, with 512 performers, 400 horses, 160,000 square feet of canvas, Tim McCoy's Real Wild West & Rough Riders of the World made its bow. In Chicago the show seemed good but raw, mingled surefire thrills with extravaganza that fell flat. Flattest of all fell McCoy's cherished pageantry stuff. Amazed, McCoy could only insist that "it has to be there. It's like candles and Christmas." What went over big, besides the imposing grand entry, was straight action: cowboys with lariats climaxed by McCoy himself roping eight horses with...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Theatre: The Real McCoy | 4/25/1938 | See Source »

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