Word: afterwards
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Almost immediately the demand for these films, as an aid to understanding and evaluating today's world, became apparent, and already some 8,000,000 people have seen the 40 Forum Edition subjects. Most of them found, not only through seeing the films but by talking about them afterward in open discussion meetings, that even such seemingly remote subjects as "South Africa" and specialized subjects like "New Frontiers of Medicine" have a very real relationship to the problems and interests of their own community...
...will teach first that children learn to live, afterward that they should learn to know. That they should know less and want more. That they should learn less and think more. That they should know less and feel more. That they should have more time for well-conducted animal spirits. That they should look at and admire the sun, moon, stars, flowers, trees, birds and butterflies...
...B.A.A. scrum all over the muddy field, but despite the fact that the American term was consistently gaining possession of the ball in the scrummages, Bermuda took advantage of the breaks, and perhaps won by their better knowledge of the game alone. Most of the Harvard players felt afterward that they might easily have won, and they looked forward in great anticipation to walloping Princeton two days hence...
...years of severe schooling, during which Matisse supported himself by copying old masters in the Louvre. ("One must learn to walk firmly on the ground," he told his own students later, "before one tries the tightrope.") When he married at 23, Matisse was considered a rising young academician. Soon afterward, he ruined his reputation; he willfully destroyed a perfectly adequate still life he had just finished instead of sending it to his dealer. "It did not represent me," explained Matisse. "I count my emancipation from that...
...Only the gowns are medieval. Wigs first became fashionable in Europe in 1624, when King Louis XIII of France hid his premature baldness under a mop of false hair. For years afterward Britain's professional men continued to wear wigs that marked them as doctor, lawyer, soldier or clergyman. Today, Britain's judges and lawyers, the Speaker of the House of Commons, the clerks of Parliament and the Lord Chancellor all wear wigs on duty...