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Across the Rainbow. The answers at hand formed a rainbow of passionate opinion. On one edge of the spectrum were the old isolationists-the Colonel McCormicks who would defend the U.S. (and possibly Canada) but let the rest of the world go hang. In the next sector were men like ex-Ambassador Joseph P. Kennedy, who would add South America to the area they would defend. Then came others who would include some Atlantic and Pacific bases as well. Over on the other side of the particolored band were the backers of the policy that (with some disastrous lapses...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE NATION: Out of the Grave | 1/1/1951 | See Source »

...enough of this contrast. "The 13 Clocks" is another magnificent book, with all the sparkle of Thurber at his best. Amid the humor and the horse play there are lines of great beauty ("The Princess Saralinds. . . were serenity brightly like the rainbow." "Somewhere a clock dropped a stony chime into the night") One can enjoy this story for its verbal felicity alone...

Author: By John R. W. small., | Title: The Todal and the Golux | 12/1/1950 | See Source »

...Sowers of Evil." Occasionally even these meager rights have been violated by mob action. Six weeks after one such episode, reports Garrison, "the periodical El Iris de Paz ('the Rainbow of Peace'!), by its own description 'a fortnightly magazine of information and guidance, Marian and Catholic'-answered a real or imaginary inquirer who asked: 'Is it lawful to enter into chapels or meeting places of Protestants . . . with the sole idea of disturbing and of destroying the furniture and other articles?' The answer was in three parts: 1) as to 'disturbing...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: A Little Intolerance | 11/13/1950 | See Source »

...Exercise Rainbow," an eight-day joint maneuver by nearly 100,000 U.S., British and French troops to test Western defenses against "an invasion by superior enemy forces from the East," began in Germany this week. The green-clad "invaders," a U.S. armored force, struck from the borders of Soviet-held East Germany and Czechoslovakia, forced back the British ist Royal Dragoons, Algerian troops from the French zone, and miscellaneous U.S. forces including regiments hastily summoned from Austria and Trieste. French, British and American planes whined overhead. Even the U.S. Navy joined in, with small craft on the Rhine. After retreating...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: INTERNATIONAL: Rainbow-Chasing | 9/18/1950 | See Source »

...Rainbow-chasing could not actually defend Western Europe against the present eight-to-one armed superiority of Soviet Europe. The real defense, rearmament, inched slowly ahead. For six weeks, the deputies of the twelve-nation North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) had been making plans for joint rearmament with a gap wide enough for a tank to crunch through: they had avoided discussing Germany, though effective European defense without Germany was impossible. When the NATO Foreign Ministers met in London last May, they had been afraid to tackle the vexed subject of rearming Germany. Korea had since changed the situation...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: INTERNATIONAL: Rainbow-Chasing | 9/18/1950 | See Source »

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