Word: viewpoints
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...there is to be peace, was more nearly in the hands of Sir John Allsebrook Simon last week than in those of any other man. At Geneva the British Foreign Secretary suavely brought the League Assembly around to a certain way of looking at the Sino-Japanese situation. This viewpoint approximated that of President Hoover and Secretary Stimson. Meanwhile at Shanghai, where the Japanese victory had become embarrassingly pyrrhic (see p. 16), worried Japanese generals, admirals and diplomats flocked around the British Minister, Sir Miles Wedderburn Lampson, who was, of course, under orders from his chief, Sir John Simon...
...column in TIME so that the ignorant people could be kept posted and refrain from telling or laughing at them. The statement as to the people being ignorant is a more important one to me. It is a grossly misrepresented statement, as can easily be seen from the impartial viewpoint of thousands who have visited our city and State. How could the people of the South be ignorant and still play such an important part in the Liberty, Growth and Development of our country? . . . C. W. BlNGHAM...
...present time there are four well defined groups of religious thought to which the title 'Liberal' or 'Modern' is attached. The first I represent by the viewpoint of Harry Elmer Barnes, the second by that of John Haynes Holmes, the third by that of Walter Lippmann, Julian Huxley, and Bertrand Russell, and the fourth by the name of Harry Emerson Fosdick." T. L. Harris, adviser in Religion in the University, said last night at a Liberal Club gathering in Lowell House...
...things considered (from the Japanese viewpoint) probably most fun was had last week by three humble Japanese sentries patrolling the Japanese South Manchuria Railway Station at Mukden, capital of Manchuria...
...reality it does not merit the name of law," promptly declared Catholic Archbishop Pascual Diaz, in a pastoral letter to his flock. "It does not merit the name of law, since if it is judged from the Catholic viewpoint it is contrary to the 'just ordination of reason' of which every law should consist; it opposes the positive dispositions of God and the teachings of the Church, the authentic and infallible organ established by Jesus Christ our Lord...