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...perhaps 150,000 Greeks; the fourth biggest navy in the world against one obsolescent cruiser, ten destroyers, 13 torpedo boats, six submarines and a few miscellaneous craft; 500 modern planes and as many more in reserve against perhaps 200 old crates (Junkers, Gloucester Gladiators, Blackburns, even French planes); the tacit support of Germany, with some 70 divisions of 1,125,000 men poised in the Balkans (according to British sources), against overt help from Britain, militarily pinned down at home and in Egypt. Despite this apparently overwhelming disparity, the Greeks chose to fight. Ancient valor was reborn...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BALKAN THEATRE: Episode in Epirus | 11/11/1940 | See Source »

...second important phrase, "conscientiously opposed to war in any form," is more significant for what it leaves unsaid than for what it does say. Anyone who does not make any statement under this section, Section X on his questionnaire, is tacitly giving his conscientious approval to participation in "any form" of war, not only in defensive war. Form 47, to be sent in along with the questionnaire, will be the last chance for those who sincerely oppose war, or who believe only in defensive war, to make their full position known. A large enough body of determined opinion against...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE MAIL | 11/1/1940 | See Source »

President Roosevelt merely replied that he was quoting the press back at the newsmen. The implication that Hitler and Mussolini wanted him out-first advanced by Henry Wallace, offered last week by Governor Lehman-now had more than tacit sanction of the President himself. Wallace had been reproved by many people and Lehman's repetition by still more (said Oswald Garrison Villard, "It seems to me that your declaration that a vote for Willkie will be a vote for Hitler . . . touches the low-water mark of unfair, unjust and intolerable partisanship . . . playing upon passions and prejudices which you ought...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE PRESIDENCY: Getting Restless | 10/14/1940 | See Source »

Bertrand Russell is here. With a tacit nod of satisfaction from the Corporation and perhaps a few grimaces from Boston's Thomas Dorgan to greet him, he arrived yesterday. The presence of this eccentric but learned Britisher marks a timely victory for the freedoms which are so much endangered today...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE LORD IS COME | 10/2/1940 | See Source »

Distances have narrowed since 1895, when U. S. Secretary of State Richard Olney declared that 3,000 miles of ocean "make any permanent political union between a European and an American State unnatural and inexpedient." A tacit London-Washington Axis is already a fact. Many British subjects, and not so many U. S. citizens, hope the Axis may eventually become a Union. Clarence K. ("Union Now") Streit, who once advocated union of all the democracies, now advocates union of the U. S. and the British Empire, about all that are left...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: No Union Now | 9/30/1940 | See Source »

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