Word: concerns
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...years off & on Author Paul lived on the rue de la Huchette and watched with interest and partisan passion the political schism that split the side street, like the rest of France, into two great hostile camps. But Author Paul's political concern lacks the gusto of his human ribaldry. There is a suggestion that the citizenry of the rue de la Huchette are somehow symbolic of democracy everywhere and that, if they had run things, the Nazis would never have got to Paris. But in view of all that goes before, their pathos...
...three B's" are the chief concern of the Donations Committee under Richard L. Hall '43 and Richard Leacock '43. This group has already been functioning through networks of representatives in the Houses, the Union, and Dudley, collecting books and blood and selling bonds and war stamps...
...fast as decisions are made, they are flashed out-to the White House, to No. 10 Downing Street, to every headquarters that they concern. Decisions must be made swiftly. But they must be deadly accurate, for no staff ever had such breadth of scope in the world's history...
Basis of the new orientation of Australian foreign policy has been the realization that Australia's present plight, and future welfare, are problems which once concerned Britain and Australia, but which are now primarily the concern of the U.S. and Australia. With the Japanese massing for invasion, the Australians were desperate. If tough, blunt talk was needed, burly Herbert Vere Evatt, Minister for External Affairs, was the man to make it. Curtin dispatched him to Washington to plead Australia's case on the brief prepared by Casey...
...Father Smyth of the Society of the Catholic Commonwealth and of an anonymous senior who writes under the pseudonym of Clark Hamilton '43. After a long and somewhat tedious statement of early Christian dogma, Father Smyth concludes that Christianity is in essence a collectivist faith, that it must concern itself with the evils of this world, and that the only Christian solution of those ills is therefore a collectivist one. This article is more Leftist in tone than even the famed Malvern Conference, and demonstrates that the Church both at home and abroad can be more than a defender...