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...could live an entire lifetime in, say, Tel-Aviv or Haifa, and never be set upon by hostile Arabs, never hear a shot, not the least gunfire, and one's closest brush with death would in all likelihood be on the roads, where cars are driven with the same reckless excitability that seems to grace the entire population. It is indeed true that, as the Israelis never tire of saying, "You are a great deal safer anywhere in Israel than on the streets of New York." But this confidence in day-to-day security, this state of ostensible normalcy, does...

Author: By Ruvane Maruit, | Title: One Version of the War in Israel | 1/28/1972 | See Source »

...columns appeared as written until Maier decided to answer a December article by Joel McNally, a Journal city hall reporter. "Fiction has its place," Maier wrote, "but not in public affairs. Time after time, city officials have unsnarled public issues thoughtlessly and carelessly tangled by false and reckless reporting...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Duel in Milwaukee | 1/3/1972 | See Source »

...Reckless Perfidy. The next morning, Prime Minister Gandhi went before the Indian Parliament. "This morning the government of Pakistan has declared a war upon us, a war we did not seek and did our utmost to prevent," she said. "The avoidable has happened. West Pakistan has struck with reckless perfidy." In a broadcast at noon the same day, Pakistani President Agha Mohammed Yahya Khan accused India of starting a full-scale war and declared that it was time "to give a crushing reply to the enemy." He made no mention of a formal declaration of war, but a proclamation...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The World: India and Pakistan: Over the Edge | 12/13/1971 | See Source »

...kind of Russian roulette remained too a factor in my later life, so that without previous experience of Africa I went on an absurd and reckless trek through Liberia: it was the fear of boredom which took me to Tabasco during the religious persecution, to a leproserle in the Congo, to the Kikutu reserve during the Mau-Mau insurrection, to the emergency in Malaya and to the French war in Vietnam. There, in those last three regions of clandestine war, the fear of ambush served me just as effectively as the revolver from the corner cupboard in the lifelong...

Author: By Richard Bowker, | Title: A Sort of Life | 10/21/1971 | See Source »

...sold 300,000 copies in Germany. Like Puccini's Tosca, Hilde Knef has lived for art and love, but like Brecht's Ginny Jenny she now casts a cold eye on her follies and grandeur. Don't expect gossip, though. Knef writes as she acts, with reckless vitality, and her book has all the choke-ups, flounderings and magnificent surprises of a great tirade...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Quality of Her Truth | 7/5/1971 | See Source »

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