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...first few dizzy weeks of independence, French officials in Tunisia were curtly told to "conform with Moslem customs," e.g., eight hours of uninterrupted work daily, no long lunch hours, Friday instead of Sunday holidays. Even Premier Bourguiba could not resist saying, "When I see a French gendarme, I choke with anger." He fired all 2,500 French cops and customs officials and several thousand minor French bureaucrats, replacing them with Tunisians. As a result, 50,000 Frenchmen (approximately 30%) have left Tunisia for France. Several weeks ago, faced with a shortage of skilled Arabs to run his administration, Bourguiba offered...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: The Cost of Independence | 6/10/1957 | See Source »

Henry the Heretic. What Miller expects his adult readers to swallow could choke a racing camel. Still, the book is a document as well as a preposterous anecdote because it gives a picture (sometimes unconscious) of a recurrent American phenomenon-the Utopian colony. Those at Harmony, Pa. or Oneida, N.Y. were founded by followers of deviate religious sects. These new California sectaries around Miller are no exception. Miller, who rivals Dr. Norman Vincent Peale for thin theology, is preaching a doctrine known along Madison Avenue as togetherness. "The ideal community, in a sense, would be the loose, fluid aggregation...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Big Sur-Realism | 6/10/1957 | See Source »

...older Presbyterians regard as near-idolatry and even younger ones regard as play-acting-the bishop in his robes has long been one of the most potent symbols. The ordinary Scot will find it surprisingly difficult to get himself, let alone his grandfather, to swallow this." Equally hard to choke down is the committee's stipulation that the Scots' bishops be consecrated initially by a laying on of hands by Anglican bishops...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: Bishops in the Kirk? | 6/3/1957 | See Source »

...hand and selected O'Neill on the other. Many who would like to attend all the productions will only see two or three of them, and each show will cut into the other's ticket sales. But this is nothing: last spring theatrical activities vacillated between a choke of four and five shows one weekend and none the next, forcing an alternate glut and fast on theatergoers. As good a production as the freshman Twelfth Night never made it out of the red because of the overwhelming competition of Gilbert and Sullivan, Sartre and Chekov. Some kind of organization...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: There's No Business . . . | 4/19/1957 | See Source »

...deplore your childish and hypocritical attitude towards President Nasser. We don't seem to be able to pick up a TIME issue these days without finding some sort of cockeyed premonition of his imminent downfall; Nasser is there to stay. May TIME choke to death on its fury...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters, Apr. 1, 1957 | 4/1/1957 | See Source »

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