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...lethal and destructive" weapons, under cover of "endless talks on the desirability of disarmament," and to charge that the West was deliberately sabotaging the London negotiations by tying disarmament issues to German reunification in a "deal" simply to help the Adenauer government win reelection. He threw in a gratuitous hint that the nuclear warfare against the British, "in view of their geographical and economic conditions, would mean irremediable catastrophe...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: DISARMAMENT: Ever Optimistic | 8/5/1957 | See Source »

...interest in foreigners and their ways, and holds pretty much that the navel of the universe is in Texas, very likely in Houston itself. Like its postwar predecessors, it has doggedly opposed teaching little Houstonians anything about the United Nations. Last April it banned every textbook with even a hint of a one-world point of view, finally drove patient School Superintendent William Moreland into resigning (TIME, April 22). Last week it announced the latest phase of its crusade-a revision of the elementary-school social-studies curriculum that will keep Houston's younger generation safe from learning anything...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Cotton Curtain | 8/5/1957 | See Source »

Bloody Recollection. Ike's cautious opening of the door to a Zhukov-Wilson conference-he shied away from any hint of personal involvement-blossomed into international headlines, provoked widespread, mixed reaction. Montana's Mike Mansfield, Democratic whip in the Senate, urged Ike to go farther, meet Zhukov face to face; such a meeting would "weigh heavily in the President's fav.or. I'm certain that the President would not be taken in." Western diplomats leaked worries that Ike's friendly remarks about Zhukov, suppressor of the bloody Hungarian revolt, might kill a U.S.-sponsored United...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE PRESIDENCY: No Invitations, Please | 7/29/1957 | See Source »

...constitutional assembly only a fortnight away, Buenos Aires was bright with posters, clamorous with speeches, angry with sporadic fistfights. At week's end there were 56 parties in the race, and new splinter groups and alliances were born by the day, few of them with any hint of a program. An awesome total of 2,183 candidates was competing for the 205 assembly seats...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: ARGENTINA: Before the Election | 7/22/1957 | See Source »

...over the continental divide from Denver. Cost: $600 for two weeks, which is usually paid by the executive's firm. (Wives may come along for $250 extra.) As soon as the executive signs up, he gets a copy of all reading material for two weeks, with a strong hint that he get to work on it at once. As last week's group arrived at Aspen, they were greeted by Philosopher Mortimer Adler (TIME, March 17, 1952), who moderates executive seminars with Corporation Lawyer and Author Louis Kelso. Said Adler: "You are here to exercise-in the seminar...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: MANAGEMENT: Adventure at Aspen | 7/15/1957 | See Source »

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