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...time for Republicans as well as labor leaders to assess the future. Oregon's onetime member of WLB, Senator Wayne L. Morse, sounded a go-slow cry to his fellow Republicans who might want to hit the anti-union warpath. He reminded them that hundreds of thousands of union workers and their families had obviously voted for the G.O.P., many of them for the first time; in effect they had given the Republican Party a two-year period of probation. With its warriors pointed to 1948, the G.O.P. leadership would think twice before leading them into a scalping raid...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: LABOR: Tread Softly | 11/18/1946 | See Source »

Then Hannegan and Sullivan were off to Chicago to assess the damage in the Midwest and to try to get the National Committee machine back on its bearings. Illinois was a fair sample of the dilemma many Democratic leaders faced. A Republican trend was running; the G.O.P. was given a good chance of cutting four of the Democrats' eleven seats in Congress out from under them. The Democratic leaders had counted heavily on a tour by Henry Wallace this month to bolster party strength in industrial districts. Now local Democrats could not drop Wallace for fear of alienating labor...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: DEMOCRATS: Had Enough? | 9/30/1946 | See Source »

While Time Remains is an effort to assess the degree of that "unpreparedness" and an inquiry into U.S. relations with the rest of the world. For the most part, Correspondent Stowe writes in lumbering, low-gear journalese ("diabolical idealistic window-dressing to make cannon fodder out of the cream of their countries' youth," etc.), but certain of his assertions are perfectly plain. Among them: 1) the U.S. itself started the atomic armament race with the U.S.S.R.; 2) the U.S. with its concentrated seaboard metropolises could not protect itself as well as Russia, were matters to come to an atomic...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Stowe's World | 8/26/1946 | See Source »

...time we tried clearly to assess where English literature stands . . . what one really thinks of Mr. Eliot's prose. And what is the matter with the young? And the BBC? And America? Why are its serious writers so very pretentious and its popular writers so bad? All these problems must be tackled with wholesome blasphemy...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Highbrows' Horizon | 3/25/1946 | See Source »

...verse which this facile versifier wrote in France during and after the German occupation. Aragon was celebrated in this volume as the laureate of the Maquis. In English these poems, intensely patriotic, often loose and ballad-like, richly embellished with surrealist imagery, are eloquent, interesting, but difficult to assess as poetry. The detached reader is likely to wonder whether Aragon is being canonized with too little regard for Jean Cocteau's cynical observation: "In French poetry there is only one rhyme: La France, la Résistance...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Poetry, Dec. 17, 1945 | 12/17/1945 | See Source »

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