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Added the Star-Times in a soberer vein: "Unneutral? Of course it is unneutral, in a world where neutrality has become Hitler's jest and Holland's grave. . . . Loud will be the laughter of Göring and Goebbels . . . when they read . . . the Post-Dispatch's editorial, translated, as it will be, in the Völkulcher Beobachter. . . . Roosevelt . . . acted in an hour of danger. . . . It was not an act of war, but an act to keep war away from America, now and forever...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Press: War in St. Louis | 9/16/1940 | See Source »

...Republican Party? Groaning Republicans saw Franklin Roosevelt, looking as insouciant as a gambler with a sure thing, planted before a backdrop of big guns, while Vice-Presidential Candidate Wallace anointed him the only true St. George. In Washington Republican politicians fumed with frustration. As GOPropaganda in an ironic vein, Missouri's Congressman Dewey Short croaked: "Franklin Roosevelt is not running against Wendell Willkie. He's running against Adolf Hitler.'' Many a GOPolitician moaned privately: "With Willkie a poor third." Polls showed that Willkie vas ho'.dmg his own, momentarily. He still drew curious crowds...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: REPUBLICANS: Mr. Willkie's Man Farley | 9/9/1940 | See Source »

...London there was a pathetic rationalization. For the next two or three months, ran the apology, Burma's rainy season will virtually cut off the road anyhow, and perhaps after that time the situation will be changed and Britain can revise the agreement. But in a less sanguine vein News Chronicle's, Vernon Bartlett wrote: "The British Government is now about to give some help to Japan to defeat China in order that Japan may then be free to play an active part on the side of Germany and Italy...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: JAPAN: Imitation of Naziism? | 7/22/1940 | See Source »

Principle of the Knott Hemo-Irradiator is simple. A small amount of blood (two cubic centimetres per pound of body weight) is withdrawn from a vein in the arm, mixed with citrate to prevent clotting. The citrated blood is passed through a rubber tube into a small, round quartz and steel irradiation chamber. Against the quartz window the doctor fits a lamp, like a flashlight, which emanates ultraviolet rays. An automatic shutter turns the lamp off every few seconds to prevent over-irradiation. Length of irradiation varies from nine to 14 seconds, depending upon the severity of the infection. Once...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Irradiated Blood | 6/24/1940 | See Source »

...inside a torn stocking, makes sewing easy. Of course the rod cannot be left inside, nor can it be removed. So Sidney Smith makes his rods of sugar in sizes to fit all types of blood vessels. Coated with a thin film of bland oil, the rod stiffens the vein or artery while a surgeon mends the break with overcast stitches. Clamps cut off the supply of blood during the stitching. Then the clamps are removed and in ten to 15 seconds, the warm blood melts the sugar and circulation proceeds normally...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Darning Blood Vessels | 6/10/1940 | See Source »

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