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...Girded Loins. After brooding for two days, Prime Minister Nehru made a broadcast denouncing China as a "powerful and unscrupulous opponent" and declaring "We must gird up our loins and face this greatest menace that "has come to us since we became independent." He announced that India would seek arms abroad, though he still seemed hesitant about directly asking for badly needed military aid from the West, since that might interfere with India's neutralist stance. Nehru pathetically harped on Red China's "lack of gratitude" for India's speedy recognition of Peking, and conceded that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: India: We Were Out of Touch with Reality | 11/2/1962 | See Source »

Seasickness v. Bach. To gird for the New Frontier. Romagna endlessly replayed tapes of the Kennedy-Nixon TV debates, worked up an assortment of new shorthand symbols to fit New Frontier talk. One graceful jiggle of the Romagna pen, for example, expands into 13 words...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Prodigious Pen | 12/29/1961 | See Source »

...part of the mother but a person in its own right, and they also opposed contraception. St. Hippolytus in the 3rd century criticized Pope St. Callistus for his leniency in granting absolution to ''women, reputed believers, who began to resort to drugs for producing sterility, and to gird themselves round, so as to expel what was being conceived...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: Birth Control & the Catholic | 9/15/1961 | See Source »

...newspaper political columnist is paid to have opinions, and objectivity is neither required nor expected. Particularly in national election years, the pundit is seized with an unconquerable urge to 1) gird his partisan loins, 2) sashay, spear in hand, forth into battle on behalf of his own political beliefs, and 3) relate the whole struggle in uncompromising terms to the state of the nation. Last week, with decision day at hand, the pundits were performing with great zest...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Punditry & Partisanship | 11/7/1960 | See Source »

...price of the private institution. . . . As the college-age population pressures generated after 1940 come upon all higher education in the next ten years, it is possible the private institutions should devote less of their energies to the problem of providing financial aid to needy students and gird up their internal programs against rising inflationary costs. Public institutions, by means of low tuition rates, can perhaps work more effectively on this problem of higher education without economic discrimination...

Author: By Claude E. Welch, | Title: Academic Freedom and the State: The Overriding Problem of UMass | 9/30/1959 | See Source »

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