Word: affected
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...heart of Europe, which policy can only be accompanied by serious consequences. Furthermore the Turk is back, and Russia, although advanced in social theories, is still politically in the Middle Ages. The real gains from the war, gains in democratic thought, are very truly endangered, and their loss will affect the whole world. In answer to the question who is responsible for the chaotic state of Europe, Mr. Kerr said that France, Great Britain, and the United States share this blame; France, because she is animated by the fear and hatred of Germany; England, because she insisted upon forcing reparations...
...them. In this play he touches upon a problem, and while he refuses to come to grips with it, he approaches near enough to size it up pretty thoroughly. The problem is that of post-mortem honor-consideration for the dues of the dead, and how far they should affect the dues of the living. But the problem is not the play; the characters make that, and the gently ironical situations...
...considerable portion of the quota to give the campaign a start. He says of the campaign, "The School in Cambridge is in cooperation with all the theological schools of the Church; In competition with none. This campaign is far broader than the School itself. Its progress and results will affect every man; woman and child in the Church for generations to come...
Perhaps the best known characteristic of Antioch College was next discussed by President Eliot: its division into two distinct parts, the students spending half their time in study and half in paid employment. The element of half time work has wide scope and would affect very much the life and education in both our own and other countries especially as regards endowment and support of schools...
...Rome and Carthage in the Third Century. The Ecclesiology of the Roman Church". In the course of the lecture Mr. La Piana will outline the struggle in the Church against monastical episcopacy, with the ultimate formation of the so called classical doctrine in Christian theology which was to affect so deeply the social, political, and religious history of mediaeval Europe...