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The World Tomorrow: A Journal Looking Toward a Christian World (1918–1934) [1] was an American political magazine, founded by the American office of the pacifist organization Fellowship of Reconciliation . It was published under the organization's The Fellowship Press, Inc., located at 108 Lexington Avenue in New York City. [2]
January – The World Tomorrow pacifist magazine begins publication. January 8 – President Woodrow Wilson delivers his Fourteen Points speech. February 21 – The last Carolina parakeet (the last breed of parrot native to the eastern U.S.), a male named "Incas", dies at the Cincinnati Zoo. March – The Liberator socialist magazine begins ...
On 2 October 1918, Polish members of the Austro-Hungarian parliament, led by DaszyĆski, forwarded a historic motion demanding restoration of an independent Polish state. They also recognized that the " Polish question " was an international matter and requested Polish participation in the Paris Peace Conference , in order to negotiate the re ...
The World Tomorrow or World Tomorrow can refer to: World Tomorrow, 2012 political talk show, hosted by Julian Assange; The World Tomorrow (radio and television), Christian radio and television program; The World Tomorrow, American political magazine, 1918–1934
Homeless Children in 2010: 31,386 11 For the complete Report Card (including sources), please visit: www.HomelessChildrenAmerica.org STATE RANKS (1-50, 1 = best)
Also in January 1918, FOR began publication of The World Tomorrow, with Norman Thomas as its first editor. National Secretary Paul Jones wrote in 1921 that the Fellowship of Reconciliation was established as one vehicle to aid in the application of Christian principles to "every problem of life."
Wells states in his May 1918 preface that the notion of a War to End War had seemed Utopian when he advanced it in 1914, but that in 1918 it had achieved "an air not only of being so practical, but of being so urgent and necessary and so manifestly the sane thing before mankind that not to be busied upon it, not to be making it more widely known and better understood, not to be working out its ...
Pacifist minister Norman Thomas, formerly of The World Tomorrow, was named as editor of the publication. [4] Heber Blankenhorn became managing editor, Evans Clark business manager, and Ed Sullivan sportswriter. [5] This effort to stabilize the daily newspaper's funding was unsuccessful, however, and the New York Leader was terminated just six ...