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...When three days later Mr. Morgan reaffirmed his determination not to let the President rush in where Congress was anxious to tread, Franklin Roosevelt, who can be as bull-headed as anyone else, laid down his ultimatum, announced that if the Chairman would not agree to cooperate with his inquiry with-in 24 hours he must either resign or face suspension...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE PRESIDENCY: The Roosevelt Week: Mar. 28, 1938 | 3/28/1938 | See Source »

...emetic for the smug and a warning to everybody. Seldom has such art been concentrated so deliberately with-in four walls as in an anti-war exhibition at Paris' Galerie Billiet last fortnight, called L'Art Cruel. The usual fate of such intentions has seldom been illustrated better than in the shallow frissons and Grand Guignol giggles with which swank Parisians responded to it. Contributors of the 48 paintings included Picasso, with his nightmarish Dreams & Lies of Franco (TIME, Dec. 27); Salvador Dali, with The Specter of Sex Appeal, in which a nai've little boy regards...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: L'Art Cruel | 1/24/1938 | See Source »

...America's Town Meeting of the Air. Its weekly Thursday audience is estimated at some 3,000,000. Last week it hit a new high when Utilities Man Wendell L. Wilkie and Assistant U. S. Attorney General Robert H. Jackson debated "How Can Government and Business Work Together?" With-in 36 hours 1,300 letters, six times any previous response, had poured into Manhattan's Town Hall, where the program originates...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Education: Town Meetings | 1/17/1938 | See Source »

With three leading articles by prominent legal figures, and miscellaneous shorter contributions by students in the Law School, the January issue of he Harvard Law Review will appear with-in the next few days...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: January Issue of Law Review To Be On Sale in Near Future | 1/8/1935 | See Source »

...arrest Mr. Gandhi in the dead of night and lodge him before dawn in Yerovda Jail near Poona, where the Mahatma had twice before been imprisoned (1926, 1930). At 3 a. m. Police Commissioner Wilson, Inspector Hirst and two strapping Indian policemen climbed the tenement stairs, approached the tent with-in which Mr. Gandhi was sleeping, bearing a warrant arresting the Mahatma "for good and sufficient reasons." Under a century-old ordinance enacted in the reign of King George IV. 50 years before Britain became an Empire, Prisoner Gandhi was to be lodged in jail for an indefinite term "during...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: INDIA: Viceroy v. Gandhi | 1/11/1932 | See Source »

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