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Word: human (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1940-1949
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Usage:

...individual being subordinate to the state, names do not make news in the Soviet press - except, occasionally, when Molotov's daughter wins a silver star in school or a Russian does or says something the party considers worth identifying him with. Consequently, the wealth of revealing human interest stories so prevalent in the U.S. press is not available for the edification of the Russian reader or the foreign correspondent...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Letter From The Publisher, Jun. 23, 1947 | 6/23/1947 | See Source »

...ended sugar rationing for consumers. The housewife could tear up her tattered ration books, look her grocer in the eye, demand five, ten, or 20 lbs. of sugar. Price controls were kept. But how long she could expect to get all the sugar she wanted was something else. Unless human nature had changed since the days of the war's black markets, many still-rationed bakers, candymakers and other industrial users would soon be bidding heavily for her supplies...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: FOOD: Decontrolled | 6/23/1947 | See Source »

...Leslie Banks and Sophie Stewart), who "struggle hard not to give the impression that they are foundering in mid-Atlantic." Perhaps the Daily Express meant to be kinder: "A piece that you [should] . . . see whenever something in the news makes you ponder that pregnant question: The Americans, are they human...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Theater: Old Folks at Home & Abroad | 6/16/1947 | See Source »

...says Mann, in one of his ecstatic outbursts, "is the most beautiful, austerest, blithest, most sacred symbol of all supra-reasonable human striving for ... truth and fullness" but it is also "only one humanistic discipline among others; all of them, philosophy, jurisprudence, medicine, theology, even the natural sciences and technology . . . are only variations ... of one and the same high and interesting theme...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Magic Mountains | 6/16/1947 | See Source »

...18th and 19th Centuries that nourished the traditions he most admires. Goethe, a dutiful privy councillor of Saxe-Weimar as well as a world poet; Tolstoy, a schoolteaching aristocrat who tried to look like a simple peasant-these men were cradled by the "bourgeois ideal of individual human universality...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Magic Mountains | 6/16/1947 | See Source »

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