Word: answer
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Dates: during 1930-1930
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With the growing realization that the pre-war point of view is incompatible with the desires of civilized people, there arises the question of how these desires may be properly fulfilled. Professor Alfred Zimmera, present Godkin Lecturer, offers an answer in an interview published elsewhere in this issue. Next summer in the Geneva School of International Studies of which he is a faculty member, five hundred students and professors of forty different nation alities will begin their seventh season establishing cultural and intellectual contacts between nations...
Whether some phases of the teaching of the arts, as well as the sciences can be brought within the scope of this new method remains still undetermined. Whatever the answer, it is fairly certain that the future will see specialized instruction broadcast through the medium of moving pictures...
When this answer arrived from the jolly old Grecian...
...after the Fort speech, short thin-haired, hawk-faced Representative Frederick Reimold Lehlbach, also from New Jersey but an avowed Wet, arose in the House to answer his colleague. Insisting that the aim of Prohibition was to stop drinking, Congressman Lehlbach exclaimed...
...does a good U. S. Protestant feel about contemporary conditions in his native land? What makes him sorry? What makes him glad? Few Protestants, however wise, would feel equipped to answer these questions comprehensively. But last week a book report was published which attempts to answer them on behalf of all U. S. Protestants, some 32,000,000 in number. Called Social Work of the Churches, it is issued by the Federal Council of the Churches of Christ in America. Perhaps the most complete declaration ever made by organized Protestantism, it was compiled during several years' work...