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...fields of mass communications: press, cinema, radio and television." Even worse, he warned, this atheistic mentality "enters the very territory of the City of God, insidiously influencing the minds of believers (including even religious and priests) with its hidden poison, and producing its natural fruits in the church: naturalism, distrust, rebellion...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Vatican Council: From Atheism to Analysis | 10/8/1965 | See Source »

...these, Hodding Carter's crime is his style, and to many radicals in the movement, the wrong style is a most serious offense, punishable by everlasting distrust. What one does is not nearly so important as how one does it. Since Carter does everything in Southern, aristocratic fashion, all the fine editorials that he may write can never commute his sentence...

Author: By Philip Ardery, | Title: Hodding Carter III | 10/7/1965 | See Source »

...Constantine's supporters beginning to wonder whether it might not have been preferable for him to accede to Papandreou's original demands for elections six weeks ago. In the interim, angry demonstrators, egged on by Papandreou's attacks on the "palace slaves," have whipped latent public distrust of the monarchy to a fever pitch. An election held now would probably not only return Papandreou to office, but be interpreted as a plebiscite on the monarchy as well...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Greece: All the King's Men | 9/3/1965 | See Source »

Against these hopeful and largely middle-class aspirations for the law lies the glowering distrust of almost all Negroes of the poor and angry lower levels. Everyone should have known, says CORE Chairman Floyd B. McKissick, that Congress could not "by one or two measly acts relieve 200 years of injustice." A Southern Negro woman who moved to Los Angeles' Watts district scoffs: "I always been votin' since I got here. But what has it got me?" Civil Rights Leader Bayard Rustin interprets the Watts riots as signifying "a society where a Negro can show...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Essay: THE NEGRO AFTER WATTS | 8/27/1965 | See Source »

Flattened by wave after wave of inflation and devaluation, many French men have developed a peasantlike distrust of stocks, bonds or paper money−and an earthy passion for material goods. These fears and desires are being profitably exploited by two French businessmen who are giving their country men something as good as gold (which Frenchmen still hoard to the extent of $5 billion) to sink their savings into. The entrepreneurs' basic idea: buy your own railroad...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: France: Playing with Trains for Profit | 8/27/1965 | See Source »

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