Word: reviews
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...internal difficulties, it bore one other meaning that was inescapable. It drew grimly, for all the world to see, the line that divides the Soviet Government from the Russian peopie. The Soviet Government is Communist; the majority of the Russian people are not. The little group of men who review the massive musters of Soviet power from the Kremlin Wall are the masters, not the servants, of the Russian people...
First-night features slated by the Network include a 15-minute talk by Dan H. Fenn '44, CRIMSON president of 1942-43 and now assistant dean of freshmen, who will present a review of College activities during the summer, a brief summary of the present scene, and a view of the University future. At 9:30 o'clock a half-hour special broadcast will feature a transcription of the prodigious registration in Memorial Hall last Thursday and Friday, with on-the-spot interviews of returning veterans and other participants in the pre-term ordeal...
...other plane suddenly whisked Minister Vyacheslav Molotov from Paris to Moscow. He had taken French leave of his fellow peacemakers. Diplomats speculated: Had Molotov finally walked out on the conference? Would he come back? Or did his flight portend a major review of Russian tactics in face of the new tough U.S. stand? Whatever the reason, the conversations in the Kremlin must be among the most stimulating (and possibly among the most decisive) in history...
...newspaper in the Ukraine, where the new Soviet purge is at its peak, dared to do so last week. "Absurd," thundered Pravda. "This theory of the right to err really means . . . the right to be free from criticism. . . . Workers' officials who are unable to review their work critically are unable to go forward and are cowards and provincials...
Robert Penn Warren, 41, onetime Rhodes Scholar and managing editor of the defunct Southern Review, has written two other novels, neither so good as this, and some first-rate poetry. In all his writing, even at its slickest-and some of this novel is pretty slick-there is a sense of doom and blood on the moon that Warren has gradually shifted into religious terms. Though the title of this book comes from a nursery rhyme, its epigraph comes from a passage in Dante's Purgatorio: "By curse of theirs man is not so lost, that eternal love...