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...Brazil" Winchell radi-orated: "For 20 years the Nazi press has been telling our respective countries that we are separated by a language. Your warm welcome to my countrymen tells the Nazi press again, I hope, that our countries are united in ideals. . . . To survive this dark hour, civilization has had to mark carefully her enemies. This means that for bright centuries to come she will also remember her friends . . . and conspicuous in civilization's friends is Brazil. . . . The fury of battle is the test of a soldier; the attack from within is the test of a Republic. Hitler...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: Wincheil in Brazil | 1/11/1943 | See Source »

...activities against such few Arab bigwigs as are known to be friendly to the British, or at least willing to negotiate. The British say that among the "arms" which Sheik Farhan was found to "possess" was one engraved with the name of a recently-assassinated pro-British Arab leader, Radi Abboushi. Such suspicions and circumstantial evidence might not hang a man in England, but the Near East is the Near East...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: PALESTINE: Acre Justice | 12/6/1937 | See Source »

...were 19 painters, sculptors and architects, among them: John Steuart Curry, Guy Pene du Bois, Reginald Marsh, Frank Mechau Jr., Mario Korbel, Joseph Renier, George Snowden, John Holabird, Dean Everett Meeks of the Yale School of Fine Arts. Many of the painters like Curry and Marsh were considered violent radi cals by Academicians eight or ten years ago, but kindly President Jonas Lie has in the three years of his incumbency been striving manfully to have the Academy follow, though belatedly, the times. Last week he explained that these elections were all provisional, would not be final until the neophytes...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Academy's 112th | 3/22/1937 | See Source »

...Author. John (Roderigo) Dos Passos was born in Chicago (1896), has lived in Manhattan, Cambridge (Mass.). London, Brussels, Madrid, Paris. He graduated from Harvard cum laude in 1916. By conservatives considered a radi cal (all his writings have "social-revolutionary" leanings), he is looked at some what askance by orthodox Reds because his books are not primarily propaganda. Though many of his friends are Communists he is not a member of any party. Unlike such writers as Upton Sinclair, Dos Passos is more of an artist than an agitator. He was one of the artists, writers arrested in Boston...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Growth of a Nation | 3/3/1930 | See Source »

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