Word: distinctive
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Dean Hindmarsh will treat foreign policy as the repercussions in the international sphere of the internal policy and not as something separate and distinct. The three motives of the internal policy and therefore of the foreign policy which he will discuss are: economic security, military security, and national prestige. He sums these up as, "food, fear, face...
...Peace Strike withstood the ravages of yesterday's festooned hecklers. To the Continuations Committee and its subsidiary organizations must go credit for the persistence in impressing their aim on an unwilling Harvard. The spontaneity which marked the first spring party last year had to fail unless some distinct and catching new feature was introduced. It is quite evident that organized annual humor cannot last if it is pitted against an aim which basically has some logic...
...late as two months ago the Republican Presidential nomination in 1936 was generally regarded as an empty honor for which no sane man would seriously strive. Since then, however, has come a distinct change of opinion among G. O. Partisans. President Roosevelt might be unbeatable by himself but, if a third party of disgruntled Leftwingers under Senator Long or someone like him should enter the field, the Republican nominee might have a bare chance to slip through to success. Some such idea was definitely in the air last week as Republicans began to stir out of their long lethargy...
...fraught with more than contemplation. Chatelaine Luhan finds it strenuous: "For every single time I have to attend to anything, whether it's a horse, or a telegram from goodness knows who, or a hole in the wall, or getting the windows washed, it is a distinct effort, like climbing a hill. . . ." When she can occasionally take a day in bed with an incipient cold, it is a great relief. "Nothing to do for a whole day-not to have to cope! I am able to cope, and one has to in this country; but I get tired...
...group in Winthrop House which has adopted as its very own the title worn by the Kirkland House society for the past four years. The notice in yesterday's CRIMSON anent a meeting of the Winthrop "Englishman" with Professor K. G. T. Webster as guest came as a distinct and pleasant surprise to members of the Kirkland House association of concentrations in English...