Word: friendships
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...Friendship between students in America and Hungary was strengthened yesterday by the Student Council's commendable vote to establish a University-wide fund drive next week to relieve suffering of refugees. Seldom does such an urgent need require such immediate action; the University community must support the Combined Charities' emergency campaign to its fullest ability...
...powers, especially those of Western Europe, Asia and Africa, where Russia has been conducting her peace offensive, can and must convey their anger through diplomatic channels. The Communists must be brought to realize that they cannot win friendship while using force against freedom...
Rationalization could be constructed from several angles. Perhaps Nehru feared to antagonize Russia, to lose her long-sought confidence and friendship. Perhaps Nehru was unwilling to repudiate his expressed faith in the Soviet "New Look" of liberalization. Perhaps, in the face of British and French aggression in Egypt, the Premier felt Russian intervention in Hungary was justified, that the Kremlin had the right to suppress the "anarchist" insurrection in an "allied" nation. Nehru himself had explained that there was "mutual killing," that the rebellion had passed the borders of sanity, and the Budapest government had lost all control...
...Fellow in 1952. When he switched to the Guardian in 1950, Wadsworth and others quickly tagged him as a comer. Since 1953 he has had a virtually free hand with editorials on defense and foreign policy. He plans to keep the Guardian independent and devoted to "the strongest possible friendship with...
...religious principles, the action was both his privilege and duty. But there is no such excuse for Dr. Dennis Haley, Boston's Superintendent of School, who not only praised the ban, but that going steady "robs the youngster of one of the finer experiences of growing up--the friendship and companionship of as wide a circle of acquaintances of both sexes as possible." This argument was stated more succinctly by Harvard sociologist George C. Homans who said, "A man gets a much better education playing the field...