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...days after Franklin Roosevelt's third inauguration, James Clark McReynolds, who will be 79 on Feb. 3, resigned as Associate Justice of the U. S. Supreme Court. He was the last of the archconservatives. Justices Willis Van Devanter and George Sutherland had retired; Justice Pierce Butler, solid rock of conservatism, had died. The last leaf on the old tree was Justice McReynolds, and even his fierce keening ("The Constitution is gone! . . . This is Nero in his worst form") had subsided from grumpy, almost invariably dissenting opinions into simple votes of "No" against liberal legislation...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: JUDICIARY: Due Process | 2/3/1941 | See Source »

Four days later, "K. T." and a few technicians were at Rock Island Arsenal looking over a medium tank (one of about 200 now on hand, mostly out of date). Day after, he was back in Detroit with 186 pounds of blueprints of an improved 25-tonner and a brand-new production problem. To work on the blueprints went 197 Chryslermen, led by Staff Master Mechanic Edward J. Hunt. Their first job: to go through the blueprints, get out a production line and a tool list, calculate production processes and finally lay out the building where the 25-tonners would...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Brand-New and Shiny | 1/27/1941 | See Source »

Director Mack had got cooperation that was worthwhile. Nash-Kelvinator shaved the price on 25,000 electric refrigerators to $52 each (retail price $105). A medicine cabinetmaker knocked down his wholesale price from $5 to $2. Another Midwestern manufacturer, after quoting rock bottom on about 30,000 bath tubs, confided: "But you can save $2 a tub if you buy the fittings from the same people we buy them from." So Mack bought "stripped" tubs, got fittings for them from the cheaper source. Savings: almost $60,000 on tubs alone. Said Director Mack, pleased as Punch...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CONSTRUCTION: D-T-U and Defense | 1/20/1941 | See Source »

Marc Blitzstein is an earnest, nice-looking, pink-principled native of Philadelphia who was once a wonder-child at the piano, later studied composition under Nadia Boulanger and Arnold Schonberg. More than three years ago, Composer Blitzstein's opera about a steel strike, The Cradle Will Rock, was given a bleak but exciting Manhattan production, with the composer pounding a piano for lack of orchestral accompaniment. Last Sunday night, in Manhattan's Mecca Auditorium, another bleak Blitzstein opera had its opening, with the composer at the piano. No For An Answer, originally conceived as a $30,000 production...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: No For An Answer | 1/13/1941 | See Source »

Where The Cradle Will Rock salted its proletarian thesis with genuinely funny satire, No For An Answer lacks wit - al though left-wingers will like its interpolated lampoon of a saloon-socialite singing I'm Fraught with You. Composer Blitz stein's jittery tunes occasionally develop into muscular near-melodies, are theatrically effective in the last ten minutes of the opera. For the most part they are sung, and sometimes talked, by people who were hired as actors rather than as singers. The production has a minimum of props and no scenery. No For An Answer, presented...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: No For An Answer | 1/13/1941 | See Source »

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