Word: generous
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...with previously unissued historic performances. Debussy's cello Intermezzo is a concert rarity never before recorded. It is dreamy, emotionally vague and inconsequential. His piano and cello Sonata No. 1 in D Minor is another matter. Here Cellist Solow gets the chance to display his flawless intonation and generous technique as the cello imitates a guitar, flute, mandolin and tambourine. The Saint-Säens C Minor Sonata is a work of contrasts and Pianist Vallecillo masters both its turbulent and serene passages. If this LP serves as an indicator of Desmar's artistic and recording quality...
...toward his jailers in the book, either. His reaction to the first ideological supervisor he meets in the camps is typical of his later opinions of encounters with party representatives: "I was beginning to like this odd man more and more. Beneath his portentous manner he was human and generous. He just happened to take his job as cell monitor very seriously." The cell monitors are also prisoners, but they are handy with the Communist catechism and able to patiently lead the study sessions in which the members of a cell bring up one another's and their own faults...
...which plays at a competitive level a few notches (a generous assessment) beneath Harvard's, this match was the equivalent of a Crimson-Oklahoma football game--there was no way the Engineers could win, but maybe they would pick up a few pointers in defeat. Besides, both schools are on Mass...
...relief programs are part of an area campaign headquartered at Tufts and aimed at college campuses. June Stein, of the International Office at Tufts, said yesterday area participation has been "good," citing efforts at MIT. B.U.. B.C., Wellesley, and Tufts. "Harvard students were very generous," Stein said...
Those needs are enormous-because Social Security has become far more generous than any private insurer would ever be. Today the system pays more in benefits to some people in a single year than they have contributed in taxes through their entire working careers. Also, in the '50s and '60s, the Government expanded the system so much that the only major group of employees not covered now are those who work for the Federal Government and some state and local government workers. Congress has never seen fit to include them, and they now have their own, separate pension...