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...previous Government in British political history has ever lasted for more than four years on as slim a lead as the Conservatives now have and then triumphed at the polls. Labourites are banking on precedent. They are also hoping that U.S. Republican victory in 1952 will prompt Britishers to redress the political balance on their side of the Atlantic in favor of socialism. Indeed, some Socialists have complained to their constituents that the one reason why President Eisenhower finally agreed, when he did, to Churchill's long-standing proposal for Big Four talks was because he wanted the Conservatives...

Author: By H. CHOUTEAU Dyer, | Title: Britain at the Polls | 5/25/1955 | See Source »

...defendants now awaiting trial at the Paris Assizes this week, one has been in jail for 32 months; the average is 18 months. Even if the defendant is eventually acquitted, he has no redress, receives no compensation for his long imprisonment. Bail is almost unheard of; Frenchmen consider it an undemocratic favoring of the rich over the poor...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: Justice on Trial | 2/14/1955 | See Source »

...reexamining it in the context of the patient's life (Jung distrusts all set dream theories), the analyst suggests this meaning: the patient has overloaded his wagon beyond its capacity; as a result, his conscious intentions receive a blow. The dream is an attempt by the unconscious to redress the balance of an exaggerated extraverted attitude which is becoming less and less appropriate as the businessman grows older...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: The Old Wise Man | 2/14/1955 | See Source »

Faith & Works. "Wherever [Christians] encounter social injustice, they will do battle for its redress . . . The church must break out of its isolation and introversion, meeting the individual where he is . . . [This] is particularly relevant to workers and intellectuals, many of whom are conspicuously outside the life of the church...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: A GUIDE FOR EVANGELISTS | 9/6/1954 | See Source »

Such a request did not surprise the official. He and others at Malacanan have heard wives complain that their husbands were too vigorous, or impotent, or unfaithful; they have been asked to redress the wrongs of abused farm tenants, to pay the rent of impoverished widows. Filipinos have inundated the Complaints and Action Commission with 23,000 requests for help since Magsaysay set it up last January. In a country where the fortunate learn early to use their government, and the unfortunate to fear it, the word has gone out that any man or woman, rich or poor, may come...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE PHILIPPINES,GREECE: MAGSAYSAY FACES HIS OPPOSITION | 6/21/1954 | See Source »

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