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...Gandhi, slowly sipped a glass of fruit juice. Half an hour later, on scheduled time, he began a one-man war of inaction: a three-week fast to protest India's stigma on Untouchables. The first day he drank a good deal of water, mixed with salt and soda. That night the British Government released him from Yerovda Jail, his home since January 1932. Still sprightly, he stepped into an automobile at the jail entrance, was driven to the villa of one of his followers, Lady Vittal Das Thackersey...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: INDIA: War of Inaction | 5/22/1933 | See Source »

...from the Stahlhelm itself. It was a move of vast import. Think of the American Legion in politics openly instead of covertly; think of it still drilling as a secret reserve of the U. S. Army. Such a body is the Stahlhelm. Founded by Franz Seldte, a retired soda-water manufacturer, the Stahlhelm's policies have always been a much diluted version of Naziism. Among its leaders only Jew-tainted Col. Düsterberg has held out persistently for a separate organization. Day after Col. Düsterberg's dismissal. Founder Seldte stepped up to a German micro...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: GERMANY: Feast of Labor | 5/8/1933 | See Source »

...Talburt of Scripps-Howard's Washington Daily News, $500 for his cartoon entitled "The Light of Asia." It showed a brawny fist, labeled Japan, clutching a crumpled sheaf of papers which blazed like a torch. It was marked: "Nine Power Treaty- Kellogg Pact." Cartoonist Talburt, one-time Toledo soda-jerker, is a Scripps-Howard ace. Oldtime Editor Negley D. Cochran who developed him says: "Some of us write editorials and are called editors; Talburt draws editorials and is called a cartoonist." The 1932 Pulitzer Prize for books on U. S. themes...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: Pulitzer Prizes | 5/8/1933 | See Source »

...production: a coathanger with attached compartment to hold mothballs or perfume; a truck tailgate which lowers to receive freight, elevates it to the truck's level. Another Gross invention, not in production, is a combination ashtray & pipe-bowl cleaner which operates like the orange-juice extractors used by soda fountains. Mr. Gross's father was an inventor. His son. 6, and daughter, 11, invent things like bedside bookracks...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Press: Can It Be Done? | 4/17/1933 | See Source »

...industrial significance which usually seem quite beside the point and have no place in the course. The industrial side of the work is emphasized in the laboratory in which a series of experiments are done, mostly laboratory imitations of industrial processes, such as the manufacture of salt or soda. The chief criticism to be made of this course is in the laboratory personel. The assistants are for the most part students studying for their master's degree, and they perform their work of drilling elementary chemistry into their charges, both in the laboratory and in the section meeting, with obvious...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Crimson Begins Publication of Eleventh Annual Guide To Courses--Reviewers Give Frank Opinions of 75 Courses | 4/15/1933 | See Source »

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