Word: credos
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...literary magazine, Pseudopodia. In demand as a speaker, gifted with a whispery, well modulated voice, she began work with Southern church groups, also interviewed prospects for the Julius Rosenwald Fund,* changed her literary magazine to the politically conscious South Today, and began to put into practice the new credo of Southern racial reform...
...obstacle shall deviate the men of La Prensa from defending, at the risk of their material interests, of their personal security if it were necessary, the liberty of thought and expression of ideas." This is the credo of one of the world's great newspapers, La Prensa of Buenos Aires. Last week it was living up to its credo. It defied the Argentine dictatorship (see p. 40), demanded restoration of freedom of the press...
Preached this old-line Navy man: "The fellow we are working for is the fellow that walks on the ground. Whatever we are doing we are doing solely to get that boy on the beach." Cooperation was his passionate credo. More than any other man in the Pacific he was charged with combining all operations into one fast, striking force...
...leaving, Dr. Feis had lost not a fight but his patience. His economic credo-free trade, moderately state-controlled international movement of capital-is Mr. Hull's too. But under a Secretary sometimes praised for basing his foreign policy on economics, the Department's economic division has been reduced to mediocre research. Economic world policy for the U.S., if any, is to be shaped in the Treasury and in Leo Crowley's newly begotten Foreign Economic Administration. From Mr. Hull's economic advisers nothing seems expected beyond long-staled routines...
...Fulbright resolution makes no hasty commitments which the nation might later regret. Yet it is a crystal-clear statement of American intentions to help make a good peace. As a foreign policy credo, it is probably as specific as could be made when the structure of the postwar world is so uncertain...