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Word: capitalistically (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Green had better be careful. If he doesn't watch out, The Crimson might next stoop to calling him a capitalist...

Author: By David B. Lat, | Title: Provost Green Should Stand His Ground | 3/4/1994 | See Source »

...From and article on Aldrick H. Ames, accused double agent, by Neil A. Louis in The New York Times, Feb. 27,1994. We are relieved to know that Mr. Ames really does love this country and all the capitalist opportunities it presents to enterprising individuals like himself...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: NEWSPEAK | 2/28/1994 | See Source »

...aftermath. Its members, a coalition of businessmen and government officials, hope to make telecommuting a viable option for the city, bringing permanent change to the way its work force is organized. "This will become the country's most advanced telecommuting system ever," said Riordan, a lawyer and former venture capitalist long practiced in cajoling the private and public sectors into cooperating with each other. "We're in this for the long run," says Roger Greaves, chairman of Health Net, a large California HMO and one of the 10 major companies in the scheme. "In an area as large...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Visions for a Shattered City | 2/14/1994 | See Source »

...getting through life. They suggest that all human existence is an improvisatory rehearsal for some grand opening night that may never arrive. Panic is the universal language. And yet, as Ives shows, rewriting life can produce a happy ending. Destiny may be, as his Trotsky says, "only a capitalist explanation for the status quo," but it can also be a sure thing. As two lovers, rapturous in bed at the beginning (and of course at the end) of another Ives play, Ancient History, dreamily say, If their happiness could be bottled, "the world would be littered with empties...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Ringing the Bell | 1/31/1994 | See Source »

Socialist victory ends the class struggle and wipes out the old "capitalist" contradiction between beauty and truth. We in 1994 may get a hoot from Ekaterina Zernova's 1937 painting of collective farmers greeting a tank in a country lane with bouquets, or Aleksandr Deineka's solemn image of Lenin (who was childless) on a country spin in an open car with seven children, thus signifying his fatherhood of Russia. Why do we laugh? Because we do not grasp how, in the words of Towards a Theory of Art by an apparatchik named G. Nedoshivin, once "the basis in reality...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Icons of Stalinism | 1/24/1994 | See Source »

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