Word: morale
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Secretary of Commerce. Mr. Hoover was a member of the U. S. Debt Funding Commission which negotiated final settlement with the Allies. No one is more familiar than he with the Republican Party's long insistence that no legal or moral connection exists between the Allied Debts and German Reparations, despite the fact that 75% of Germany's $28,000,000,000 Reparation payments are destined to reach the U. S. as Debt payments from the Allies. The Hoover moratorium proposal was the first time a Republican President had ever admitted a connection between these two great items...
...people did not want Fatty Arbuckle to return. One was Canon William Sheafe Chase, who said: "I have no personal animosity toward this man but think it very unwise to have him at this time to what I consider a very im nity." portant Wrote moral Editor influence Quirk: in the "No one commu accused Arbuckle of making a picture wasn't clean...
...Author has written her tale in a manner that seems oldfashioned, courtly, Victorian when compared with contemporary styles. At times reminiscent of her friend, David Garnett, she has none of Garnett's slyness; her implications are altogether moral. Member of an old Huguenot family that has lived in England for generations, daughter of a Victorian clergyman, Edith Olivier lives in Wilton, on the edge of Salisbury Plain, in a house that was once the dairy on the Earl of Pembroke's estate. Near neighbor is Siegfried Sassoon (Memoirs of an Infantry Officer?TIME, Sept. 29). Authoress Olivier rarely goes...
...real father was or what was wrong with her, but at 13 she had begun to worry. When Falconer arrived in England Judy was whisked off to a farm in the country, where she was made the slavey of an ill-natured old nurse who treated her like a moral leper. When one night in a fit of rage the nurse explained to Judy what a bastard was, told her she was it, Judy was horrified, ran away. When they finally found her, unco guidness and her own adolescent fears had almost addled her little pate; it took...
...Federal Council of Churches of Christ in America was a first step, taken 23 years ago, toward co-operation of U. S. Protestant denominations. It was hoped that it might at least give to Protestantism a united voice on moral, not theological, questions. For the long distant future there was hope that eventually all the Protestant bodies flourishing in the U. S. would merge into one staunch Protestant Church...