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More Production. A war-hating Quaker, Mr. Boyd did not think of his foams as war materiel until the Army gave him a sizable order. Early in '42 the Navy swamped him with an order for 200,000 gallons, almost a year's production for his small, old-fashioned factory...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: PRODUCTION: Navy Bean Soup | 12/6/1943 | See Source »

...soon became a Lutheran, left London as a Presbyterian missionary to Canada, reappeared as an Anglican curate in Kent. Then he dropped his clerical garb, called himself Lincoln, in 1910 was elected M.P. with the help of B. Seebohm Rowntree, a credulous cocoa king for whom Lincoln had turned Quaker. During World War I he became a British mail censor, was jailed after boasting how he had outsmarted Britain as a spy. Released an Anglophobe, he tried to help German militarists back into power, eventually sold out to France. In the mid-'20s Chinese Buddhist Abbot Chao Kung...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones, Oct. 18, 1943 | 10/18/1943 | See Source »

Also central to the Quaker view is the exasperating belief that a God of Love cannot be at the same time a God of War, that the injunction which gives Christianity its specific spirit is Christ's specific injunction not to use force...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: Force or Power? | 10/11/1943 | See Source »

...world's people" know what Quakers are up to when they sit, hands folded patiently, in hour-long silence. They are listening, as some Friends say, "in the silence of all flesh." For central to the Quaker view is the belief that man is a moral ruin, that only in the silent suspension of man's common activities can God "work in and direct the soul" as "by an invasion, a breaking in, a prevailing of the Divine...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: Force or Power? | 10/11/1943 | See Source »

...Detroit last week some 100 worshipers and two priests sang and prayed as silently as a Quaker meeting. They were participating in a mission for the deaf and dumb in St. Aloysius Roman Catholic Church. Services were carried on in sign language by Fathers William Bernard Heitker and Raymond Charles Kalter...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: Silent Worship | 10/4/1943 | See Source »

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