Word: post-world
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...Roman Catholic Church has branded the Marxist doctrine of socialism with its disapproval. That disapproval became such a political reflex that Catholic parties often seemed to be identified with opposition to social progress itself. The effort to correct this impression, plus the urgent menace of Communism, gave birth, in post-World War II in Europe, to the surprisingly successful Christian Democratic movements in Italy, Western Germany, Belgium and France...
General Motors in existence today. When Du Pont took control during the post-World War I depression, the young auto giant was headed for the rocks. Brilliant, mercurial William Crapo Durant, who put the company together, was $80 million in debt and on the verge of bankruptcy. Du Pont had already put $49 million into the company's stock. By risking another $31 million of its capital, Du Pont bailed out Durant and put the company back on course, not only with cash, but also with managerial talent. Du Pont President Pierre S. du Pont, who had been actively...
...graduate students were married during the Depression, for that matter, few were married until the post-World War II era. Before 1945 probably no higher than eight per cent of the students in the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences had wives...
Dada, the yeasty nihilistic movement of post-World War I days, seemed tired and tattered, its once-youthful stars well past middle age. Even the exhibits had lost most of their punch-Man Ray's ticking metronome with a staring eye impaled on the blade, entitled Object to Destroy; Marcel Duchamp's bearded and mustachioed version of the Mona Lisa; a mirror into which visitors peered until they saw the title, Portrait of an Imbecile...
...they seem deliberately injected for shock value. As for the symbolism and the irony (though Remarque says no symbolism was intended), they could scarcely be more obvious-the most valuable stone, a black obelisk, winds up as the marker over a prostitute's grave, and in a post-World War II epilogue, only the madhouse and the maternity hospital are left undamaged. Remarque has long ago mastered a direct, insistent style that keeps the pages turning even when he seems all but mesmerized by the sententious cliche. There is much in this book that is funny, rueful and sorrowfully...