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...most of its leaders learned their guiding principles from Jesuit fathers of St. Louis, who founded Belize's St. John's College in 1896 and taught Roman Catholic trade union-i§m in extension courses begun in 1947. The P.U.P.'s trade-union twin, the Gener al Workers Union, is an outgrowth of these courses, and George Price, the slender 35-year-old descendant of slaves who runs both outfits, is a St. John's graduate and a Catholic. Say the priests: "If we hadn't stepped in, the Reds would have." One result...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BRITISH HONDURAS: All De Way | 5/10/1954 | See Source »

...improved library--the best on American subjects in Central Europe--and another excellent faculty helped to make the record of the second year just as impressive. Harvard was again represented by Professor Leontief, and Talcott Parsons, professor of sociology, made his first trip to the Seminar. In gener- al, however, the teaching staff was more broadly representative of the United States than in the first year. Professor Henry Nash Smith of the University of Minnesota was chosen as Executive Director and lectured at Salzburg on the for tan lectured at Salzburg on the impact of thew West in American Though...

Author: By Herbert P. Gleason, | Title: At Start of Third Year Salzburg Seminar Boasts Imposing Record | 4/15/1949 | See Source »

...painting includes early illustrations in the books of legend, later gener scenes with ornamental borders, two of the curious "Automata", and several miniature portraits. The pottery may be summarized briefly as cream-colored ware and the famous turquoise blue, luster ware and tiles, and certain embossed and lustred bowls of great rarity...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Collections and Critiques | 2/12/1937 | See Source »

...Sidney Lee, Litt.D., lectured in Sanders Theatre last evening upon the subject. "Foreign Influences on Shakespeare." Abundant evidence exists. I said, which points to direct foreign in menaces upon Shakespeare, but we must attribute the skill with which he handle his foreign dramas rather to the gener diffusion of thought during the Renais since and to his own preeminent genin than to the influence of any particular foreign writers. To all his erections intensively gives universal emotions an at the same time, never losing sight his setting, he infuses, in his character the essential racial idiosyncrasies manned by the environment...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Mr. Lee on Shakespeare. | 2/19/1903 | See Source »

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