Word: workers
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...Bristol Jr., a 3O-year-old Manhattan businessman, is a good example of a layman who works hard for Christianity without stumbling into either pitfall. He is a devout Episcopalian. As a licensed lay reader, a synod delegate and field worker for his church's New York diocese, he tries his best to gain more followers for what he calls "the sleeping giant" of U.S. religious bodies. As vice president of the Laymen's Movement for a Christian World, he tries to make Christian principles felt in various segments of public life, e.g., by helping...
...selections reflect Layman Bristol's wish to make the hymnal, intended primarily for children, a "happy book." To appeal to children, they have stressed hymns about Christ's boyhood and everyday life, e.g.,O Master of the Callous Hand, Bristol's own My Master Was a Worker...
...does nothing to help solve the problem of 2,000,000 Italian unemployed, the biggest single reservoir of Italian Communists. Pella got some encouragement from the council's decision that jobs in any member country which remain unfilled after 30 days may henceforth be filled by bringing a worker from another member country. Theoretically, this would open undermanned British coal mines to thousands of Italian miners; in practice, local prejudices are not likely to yield...
Last week Brittain made part of Beaverbrook's prediction come true. He converted the weekly Recorder into a daily, the first new British daily since the London Daily Worker was started 23 years ago. For his new paper, Brittain has a staff of 70, and to finance his venture, he has close to half a million dollars from a stock issue and notes. (Fleet Streeters gossiped that Beaverbrook himself had invested in the paper, but both the Beaver's office and Brittain denied it.) Editor Brittain hopes to find a "new public" of 500,000 readers...
...individual professor is furthering the Communist cause--or he isn't. The situation meets with the majority of alumni approval--or it doesn't. Why not find out? And why not send a copy of your full page discussion of the Boston Post to the Daily Worker in New York asking for their views? I'll wager a one year's subscription to the American Mercury Magazine for the CRIMSON Editorial Board that the Daily Worker will approve of your stand. Kenneth D. Robertson, Jr. '29 Elm Street, Concord, Mass...