Word: regarded
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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This is often made possible in France because there it is traditional to regard marriage and sexual love as either fusable or separate things. This does not mean that every French husband or bachelor has a mistress. What it does mean is that the French woman does not have to be enigmatic, isolated or incomprehensible. Like her husband she is gregarious, and hence wants a family more than she wants the vote. Like him, she is economical, often in the less advantaged classes to the point of unsanitation. A beaten rug loses part of its life, and no scraps...
...that actually the English were "white Jews" and that British "Protestantism" was after all only a modern version of the "old Jewish law book.'5 "This theory," conceded the paper, "is, of course, too novel to be immediately grasped by everyone. We have been far too accustomed to regard England as we would like it to be. Thus we honor Shakespeare as we would a German classical poet, overlooking the fact that the very qualities that we admire in him made him a poor example of Englishman...
...those days money was easily earnt and plenty of it," and the Welsh coal miners lived a powerful, lyric, godly life without regard for English speech or English law; eating excellently, working hard and steadily. The authority of God and of each family's father dwelt as organic in them as song, and song was as immediate to them "as sight is in the eye." Then paradise was lost: the iron works in the next valley shut down and flooded the collieries with cheap labor...
...regard to post-war settlements, 10 per cent of the Princeton undergraduates are internationally-included enough to favor a United States of the World, while 24 per cent would like to see the peace result in a federated Europe. A vindictive 8 percent favor an "exterminating" peace of dividing Germany in case the Allies...
...result of the somewhat smaller size of the College, the non-resident membership plan, and greater preference in admission to juniors and seniors, the unhappy situation in regard to the men left out of the Houses has been greatly eased. At the present time there are only two seniors on the waiting list as compared with 14 a year ago, while the total waiting list contains only 82 names as contrasted with 182 in the fall of 1938. Students, parents, and officers of the College are grateful to the Masters for the concession which has been made in the adoption...