275 WEEK BY WEEK Matter for Compromise? THERE are times when it is hard to square what happens in our courts with the basic principle of English (and American) common law that a man...
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279 The Middle East The stakes are high and political bargaining, to the point of danger, is the order of the day. By M . A. FITZSIMONS HEATED comment on Britain's Iranian difficulties has not...
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282 FROM ENGLAND Hilaire Belloc, Grand Old Man GEORGE BERNARD SHAW often hit the headlines of the daily press with some piece of audacious wit or cutting contempt for general opinion. Hilaire...
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283 SO THEY TELL ME A Shaky Case for the AMA WHEN I was a very young roan I spent most of a year reading Irish plays and Irish and French books about the nownfaded gleam olf the...
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285 The Stage COURTIN' TIME "COURTIN' Time" has for its principal assets Joe E. Brown as a New England widower bent on remarrying and Carmen Mathews as one of his four prospects. Mr. Brown,...
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The Screen CAN'T HELP LOVIN' DAT FILM SINCE THE highly popular "Show Boat" has been revived twice on the stage and twice in the movies since its New York premiere in 1927, it might be called a...
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Communications Wayward Crusader New York, N. Y. TO THE Editors: While in Berlin a year ago I attended an "International Peace Rally" in the Soviet sector. Among the orators I was...
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287 An English View of French Novels By SERGE HUGHES THERE appears to be in England and in France today a noticeable aversion towards a good part of tibe literature of the nineteenth century....
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290 Books Traveller's Samples. Frank O'Connor. Knopf. $2.75. SOMEBODY who is handy with footnotes ought to get real interested in why the Irish, in general, make sudi lively...
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