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...brought up to counteract talk about Iran). Sir Alexander Cadogan, Permanent Undersecretary in the Foreign Office, leaned forward and tried in vain to calm him. But Bevin ploughed on: "I am so tired of these charges by the Soviet Government in private assembly that no one will be happier than I to see that they are brought out into the open." As he does when really worked up, Ernie Bevin put his glasses back on and took them off again. "If there is a complaint by the Iranian Government against the Soviet Government, I believe that peace depends on bringing...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: UNO: Town Meeting of the World | 2/4/1946 | See Source »

...welled up. People hated the ubiquitous black marketeers, sneered at their nouveau riche manners. They railed against the Government. The gay, graceful days of Gallic joie de vivre seemed a thing of the past. A kind of national dissatisfaction gripped the French: thousands were talking of leaving for some happier land, and many actually applied for visas. In their physical misery and moral confusion Frenchmen no longer spoke of "la belle France"; now it was "pauvre France...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: FRANCE: Les Mis | 1/14/1946 | See Source »

...speaking now of the liberty of the Christian but of political liberty, the liberty of the citizen-this liberty not only left him cold, but its impulses and demands were deeply repugnant to him. . . . Luther hated the peasant revolt which ... if successful, would have given a happier turn to German history, a turn toward liberty. . . . He told the princes that they could now gain the kingdom of heaven by slaughtering the peasant beasts. Luther, the German man of the people, bears a good share of responsibility for the sad ending of this first attempt at a German revolution...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: GERMANY: Hunter & Hunted | 1/7/1946 | See Source »

Censorship was still news-and still impeding the news. In the U.S. the Office of Censorship was all gone but the archives; nobody was happier to see it go, insisted Director Byron Price, than he. Last week in his final report to Harry Truman, precise, silver-haired, ex-A.P.-man Price made two cogent points: 1) any wartime censorship must "hold to the single purpose" of keeping dangerous information from the enemy; 2) "no one who does not dislike censorship should ever be permitted to exercise censorship...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Censorship, Pro & Con | 12/31/1945 | See Source »

...idea is that Joan Crawford, in the title role, will do absolutely anything for her daughter, who is a most unpleasant female. This, of course, leads Miss Crawford into all sorts of difficulties, but she never realizes to the bitter end that it all would be much neater and happier if she killed her daughter about a third of the way through the movie. The film's detectives might condemn her, but the audience would...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: MOVIEGOER | 11/13/1945 | See Source »

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