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...almost certain death. If late afternoon finds a muleteer in the valley, he gets panicky and whips his beasts to escape lefore sunset. Workers on the Central Railway, which winds between the valley's forbidding mountain walls, insist on being taken home each night. Travelers through the valley dread to ride the railroad in the rainy season, for fear a landslide may maroon their train...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Death in the Valley | 5/19/1947 | See Source »

...unsettled state of Europe, the dread potentialities of atomic war, and a lack of faith by the United States and Russia in one another's motives, have produced a condition of tenseness in which the original spirit of the United Nations plays a very poor second to national interest...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Soviet Stall | 5/7/1947 | See Source »

Created out of a Puritan dread of leaving "an illiterate ministry to the churches," the nation's oldest--and, perhaps correspondingly, wealthiest and most illustrious--university has, for the past two years, been quietly resolving the greatest paradox in its 311-year history. By Commencement next month, a special investigating commission will recommend to the Corporation a revitalizing treatment for one of the University's neediest members, the Divinity School...

Author: By Richard A. Green, | Title: Divinity School at Crossroads, Awaits Commission's Findings On Possibility of Reformation | 5/2/1947 | See Source »

...only the men from Winthrop House. Latest attempt by the Puritan Prom sponsors to help relax those undergraduates afflicted with that dread disease "the reading rattle," the impromptu bleating succeeded in waking up half a dozen Widener nappers...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Yard Squirrels Pick Puritans To Reduce Rattle Resources | 4/24/1947 | See Source »

Aftosa, First of All. Last summer Mexicans were rash enough to import 320 tickproof Brazilian zebu bulls. The bulls brought the dread aftosa, or foot-&-mouth disease. By last week an epidemic had spread through ten states, and excited patrons were refusing perfectly good steak in Mexico City restaurants. Worst of all, the U.S., soundly fearing infection of its own herds, had banned the import of Mexican cattle. This was a deep hurt; 500,000 head shipped over the border each year make a big difference in northern Mexico's prosperity. Last week, while the U.S. Congress shoved through...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: MEXICO: The Visitor | 3/3/1947 | See Source »

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