Word: unites
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...action. 1) It urges President Conant to make a public statement on the oath and "take those steps necessary for (its) removal." 2) The JRC supports the joint committee of student organizations protesting only the "informal association" criteria and the "informer clause" as basis for exclusion from the Harvard unit. 3) The JRC further urges general student agitation as necessary to bring about "complete removal" of the whole loyalty program...
...that clean-cut chin he has a heart of gold. It seems hard to believe that his men couldn't catch on to the idea that their high command had sent what was really a nice guy down to do the dirty work of restoring morale to a jittery unit...
...Battleground" is the story of an airborne unit at Bastogne, during the German winter counter offensive of 1944. This is a singularly unheroic unit as movie fighters go, preoccupied not with the Tradition of the Service or the Call of Duty, but with frozen feet, interminable K-rations, and three-day passes to Paris. The unit is trapped, partly through its own inexperience. It fights against an intelligent, non-fanatic enemy it often cannot see. Its men die quietly and terribly with a minimum of dissertation on the evils of war, or the girls they have left behind...
Decisive Weight. Like Novelist Waugh, Escoulin criticizes the U.S. Catholic tendency to act as a social bloc-a condition which he sees "marvelously reflected in the American parish" (especially in small and average towns), where the church, school and parish house "make up a complete social unit sufficient unto itself . . . [and in which] the priest is the little king...
...Battleground" is the story of an airborne unit at Bastogne, during the German winter counter-offensive of 1944. This is a singularly unheroic unit as movie fighters go, preoccupied not with the Tradition of the Service or the Call of Duty, but with frozen feet, interminable K-rations, and three-day passes to Paris. The unit is trapped, partly through its own inexperience. It fights against an intelligent, non-fanatic enemy it often cannot see Its men die quietly and terribly with a minimum of dissertation on the evils of war, or the girls they have left behind...