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Battle of the Oceans. The great battle had already begun. Pundit Walter Lippmann called it the Battle of the Oceans. The day before the pact was signed he wrote: "The battles over England and northern Europe and in the English Channel, at Gibraltar, toward Egypt and Suez, at Dakar in Africa and in French Indo-China are the opening battles of a great campaign in which there is at stake . . . the mastery of the oceans of the world...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: INTERNATIONAL: Milestone: Oct. 7, 1940 | 10/7/1940 | See Source »

These protestations did not satisfy U. S. Pundit Walter Lippmann, who shook a stern forefinger and warned: "President Vargas made it clear to us that if we permit the Axis to win in Europe, the Axis will not have to conquer what it covets in South America. . . . There will be dictators . . . who will ally themselves with Hitler and Mussolini. . . . Our problem, then, will not be how to defend this hemisphere against Europe. Our problem will be how to defend ourselves in this hemisphere...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: SOUTH AMERICA: Awake at Last | 6/24/1940 | See Source »

Brazil's Problem is no less difficult than the U. S. problem Pundit Lippmann posed. In the ten years that he has maintained himself in power by rewriting the Constitution when he pleased, Dictator Vargas has played a game of posing as the U. S.'s best South American neighbor while yielding more & more to totalitarian influences. Today his Foreign Minister, Oswaldo Aranha, is prodemocratic, pro-Ally, pro-U. S., while his War Minister, Eurico Dutra, and his Marine Minister, Enrique Guilhem. are outspokenly pro-Nazi. His people are prodemocratic, his Army pro-totalitarian...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: SOUTH AMERICA: Awake at Last | 6/24/1940 | See Source »

Jubilated Liberal Pundit Harold J. Laski: "The three pivotal economic positions in the Ministry are held by Labor [War Cabinet's Greenwood, Supply's Morrison and Labor's Bevin]. Behind their occupants is the solid support of the trade unions. These are gains of an immense kind. They mean that Labor dominates the economic organization for the conduct...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: Democracy in Pawn | 6/3/1940 | See Source »

...recent years Boston's Museum of Fine Arts has admitted a fine van Gogh, a good Cézanne, a very expensive Gauguin. But as late as 1926 F. W. Coburn, art critic of the Boston Herald, still denounced modernism in the tones of a Cotton Mather. To Pundit Coburn, Cézanne was a poor painter whose good dinners caused his friends to "whoop it up for him and get his pictures admitted to places where they wouldn't otherwise have been received"; van Gogh was "a crazy galoot who cut off his own ear to spite...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Sane Boston | 6/3/1940 | See Source »

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