NME in Association With War Child Presents 1 Love

NME In Association With War Child Presents 1 Love is a charity album by various artists. The New Musical Express (better known as the NME) is a pop music magazine in the United Kingdom which has been published weekly since March 1952. War Child is a charitable organization that works with children affected by war in Iraq, Afghanistan, Democratic Republic of Congo and Uganda. War Child works with children who have been hit hardest by the joint forces of poverty, conflict and social exclusion.

Other War Child albums include The Help Album (1995), Help!: A Day in the Life (2005) and War Child Presents Heroes (2009).

Read more about NME In Association With War Child Presents 1 Love:  Track Listing, External Links

Famous quotes containing the words association, war, child, presents and/or love:

    With all their faults, trade-unions have done more for humanity than any other organization of men that ever existed. They have done more for decency, for honesty, for education, for the betterment of the race, for the developing of character in man, than any other association of men.
    Clarence Darrow (1857–1938)

    This people must cease to hold slaves, and to make war on Mexico, though it cost them their existence as a people.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)

    The question is still asked of women: “How do you propose to answer the need for child care?” That is an obvious attempt to structure conflict in the old terms. The questions are rather: “If we as a human community want children, how does the total society propose to provide for them?”
    Jean Baker Miller (20th century)

    There are three hundred and sixty-four days when you might get un-birthday presents ... and only one for birthday presents, you know.
    Lewis Carroll [Charles Lutwidge Dodgson] (1832–1898)

    There are some women ... in whom conscience is so strongly developed that it leaves little room for anything else. Love is scarcely felt before duty rushes to encase it, anger impossible because one must always be calm and see both sides, pity evaporates in expedients, even grief is felt as a sort of bruised sense of injury, a resentment that one should have grief forced upon one when one has always acted for the best.
    Sylvia Townsend Warner (1893–1978)