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Nationalization as a cure-all for Britain's ills is out. What Wilson has in mind is far more selective and would extend state ownership to greener pastures. Pastures, in fact, may well be taken over by the government as part of its program to ease the housing shortage; Labor intends to buy idle building land, at market prices, for new state-owned housing projects. But its biggest prize would be the new products and whole new industries that science and socialism are to create. The state would also control the cadres of scientists and reserves of knowledge that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Great Britain: The Road to Jerusalem | 10/11/1963 | See Source »

...more important domestic economic legislation has come before the Congress in 15 years," the President of the U.S. told the nation last week. He was referring, in a televised talk, to the $11.1 billion tax-cut bill. And to hear him describe it, the measure was the cure for everything except maybe halitosis and warts...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Economy: Of Druthers & Deficits | 9/27/1963 | See Source »

...past, the say has always been resoundingly negative. Though Queen Victoria liked the notion of a tunnel as a potential cure for her seasickness, she found it "very objectionable" in principle. In the 1880s, when an early tunnel project actually bored two miles into the chalk near Dover, the Sunday Times worried that "We should have an amount of fraternizing between the discontented denizens of the great cities . . . which would yield very unsatisfactory results on this side of the Channel...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Europe: Channeling under the Streak | 9/27/1963 | See Source »

...Accommodation. Common folk still sought a king's touch as the cure for scrofula, still believed that the twitching of a hazel twig betrayed the nearness of criminals, still looked to omens and cabalistic signs as a guide to the future. The Swedish poet Georg Stiernhielm was accused of witchcraft for burning a peasant's beard with a magnifying glass, and witches would continue to stalk the lands of Europe for as long as King Louis lived (Durant reports that in Scotland the last one was sent to the stake in 1722). But at the same time, Hooke...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Faltering Trajectory | 9/27/1963 | See Source »

...same rooms as recent smallpox cases. Among 1,126 similar contacts who did not get the drug, there were 78 cases of smallpox and twelve deaths. The drug, N-methylisatin beta-thiosemi-carbazone, has no U.S. trade name, though Wellcome Laboratories has labeled it 33T57. It is no cure for smallpox and no substitute for vaccination, but should prove valuable in helping to prevent the spread of smallpox among the unvaccinated or those who have been improperly vaccinated...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Against Smallpox | 9/20/1963 | See Source »

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