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...they won't be collected a second time by a new government. There is order without law because the Cubans are a friendly people. . . . The situation in Cuba is a kind of passive anarchy." Far from passive last week was General Menocal's onetime subordinate, Captain Juan Bias Hernandez, veteran of the abortive 1931 Menocal Revolution against Tyrant Machado. With his wide sombrero cocked jauntily, swaggering Captain Bias was fighting Government troops and recruiting fighters of his own in Camaguey province. Last week he captured several towns-one named Moron-and beat his way steadily toward Havana. Terrified...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CUBA: Passive Anarchy | 10/2/1933 | See Source »

Next thing Havana knew Son Bias and President Grau had come to terms. Father Bias abruptly left his rebel army in the field, journeyed to Havana with a "guard of honor" composed of Government troops he had been fighting a few days before. Cheered as he swaggered into the Presidential Palace to embrace President Grau, Captain Bias explained away his insurgence thus: "The trouble is that wherever I go inevitably a crowd gathers about us. About 300 did that last week and with the difficulties of communication added to the fact that none of us seems interested in telling...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CUBA: Passive Anarchy | 10/2/1933 | See Source »

...their case the arrangement would be more than a social amenity. It would afford them practical openings to view their prospective residences more or less from the inside, and thus to make their final choice of House with a clearer eye than that of mere prejudice and untimely bias. A Freshman inter-House eating prerogative would moreover give much encouragement to friendships between upperclassmen and first-year men, which could be of essential benefit, but which are scarcely flourishing at the present. Certainly, under the wide aegis of the House Plan, the dinner table has come to be a focus...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: TO EAT, AND FOR LOVE | 9/29/1933 | See Source »

Meantime, from the hill rebellion in eastern Cuba began to come names of leaders. One was Colonel Juan Bias Hernandez whose name showed brightly on Ortiz' posters offering $500 reward for his capture, dead or alive. Airplanes had failed to spot Hernandez' hill hideout. His mounted band knifed swiftly again & again at government troops, ripped off a few and swerved back into the hills. Last week he challenged them, "Come...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CUBA: Stamper Arrested | 6/5/1933 | See Source »

...evening, Gather feels better about things: he meets his wife at a concert, lays the groundwork of a reconciliation, and goes off to Duxbury by himself to think everything over. The Author, like his hero and unlike many of his death-possessed colleagues, has a personal reason for his bias towards grave thoughts. When he was n he saw his father kill his mother and then commit suicide. Harvardman (1911), Conrad Aiken was Class Poet, in a college generation that included such notables as Thomas Stearns Eliot, the late Alan Seeger, Van Wyck Brooks. Walter Lippmann, the late John Reed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Pathetick Passion | 5/15/1933 | See Source »

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