Word: discordances
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...this internal rumbling before dinner caused some pundits to diagnose a new case of discord in the Democratic Party. But observers with good memories settled back to watch the Democrats being just Democrats in a normal, non-election-year performance...
...church," the Cardinal had said, "recognizes the necessity with which rulers in some Catholic countries may be faced of granting-because of grave reasons-a degree of tolerance to the other cults. But tolerance is not a synonym for freedom of propaganda which foments religious discord and alters the secure and unanimous possession of truth and of religious practice in countries such as Italy, Spain and others...
...framed copy of Burt's The Real Victim, a tearful protest against domestic discord, had been hung by Judge Cornelius Harrington just inside his courtroom in the Cook County circuit court. Last week, when a pretty blonde named Lorraine Eliasen, 25, appeared in court with her husband seeking temporary alimony pending trial of her separate-maintenance suit, Judge Harrington thought that the Eliasens looked ripe for the poetic treatment. He called the couple into his chambers, told them what a "beautiful-looking couple" they were and what a "gorgeous-looking boy" little five-year-old Roy was. Says Harrington...
...with Conant, dominates the Faculty with absolute finality. But as is his way, Buck never attempts to refute such charges, merely chuckles scoffingly. Once to a group of freshmen, he said: "Harvard would be a more restful place for the denizens of University Hall were there less discord. But eliminate the discord and you dry up the source of Harvard greatness...
...written by Mac Cache and Joseph L. Morse, Manhattan book distributors and publishers (Unicorn Press), the ad asked the paper to switch because "there is genuine discord . . . between the Times and the vast majority of its readers." Eisenhower, said the ad, "has gone so far off the deep end politically as to support such men as Rush Holt and Chapman Revercomb, who repulsively stand for what the Times has always courageously fought." Cache and Morse urged the Times's readers to "besiege our favorite newspaper with thousands of letters, cards, wires" asking the paper to "reverse its stand...