Word: centralizing
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1940-1940
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...meet the recent demand of University undergraduates for information as to the social and economic conditions in Central and South America, the Guardian is sponsoring a talk by Professor Clarence H. Haring '07 on "Our Present Relations with Latin America," in the Lowell House Junior Common Room at 7:30 o'clock tonight...
...square dance. There can be little in common between a democratic America and a totalitarian Brazil; Brazil, a country larger in area than the United States with an overwhelmingly illiterate population ruled by a complete dictator, can have little interest in preserving democracy. Economically Canada, the United States, and Central America are a unit in that the predominant part of the trade of this area moves North and South. But from Bravil down to the Antarctic we find countries that can not depend on inter-American trade exclusively; in fact, these countries can not live unless they export elsewhere. These...
...Gedye published a violently worded political commentary on events in Central Europe. Those events were a chapter in a story not then, if yet, finished, and the progress of which it was Mr. Gedye's duty as our Central European correspondent to report impartially day by day. Mr. Gedye honestly took the view that he could publicly show a partisan attitude to those events without impairing his reputation as an impartial recorder of news. We believed that our readers would not think so, and that in fact Mr. Gedye had himself destroyed his value to us as a reporter...
...Farmers rocking on their porch chairs in the evening, clubmen lounging beside an afternoon cocktail, come to Clapper conclusions almost exactly the day he does. With the same painful care that his daily readers were exercising, he had been trying to spell out very simply just what was the central issue in the 1940 campaign. The war had obscured the issue, Candidate Franklin Roosevelt talked about loftier things, Candidate Wendell Willkie some how couldn't seem to make it plain...
...living space in a Fascist "new world order," and all he asked as quid pro quo was that the U. S. should recognize Europe and Asia as the Lebensraum of Germany, Italy and Japan. (La Stampa of Turin, still more generous, offered the U. S. South and Central America as "living space...