Word: professionalisms
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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Not long ago Leonard Feather, England's gift to the jazz critic's profession, arranged an album for the Victor company called "Esquire's All-American Hot Jazz." It features some of the musicians chosen by the Esquire people, including Mr. Feather, for their 1946 Gold Awards. There are four...
Observes Columbia's Law Dean Young B. Smith, eyeing the G.I. Bill of Rights uneasily: "A university is under the obligation to give general education to as many as possible, but the professional schools ought not to train more than the profession can absorb. [A glut of lawyers] creates unemployment and frustrated desires. . . . It would be mistaken patriotism to train too many. . . . A disappointed lawyer is just smart enough to make trouble for everybody. He is likely to become a sourbelly and a revolutionary...
When he died (of tuberculosis) at Saranac Lake, N.Y., in August 1944, he was to U.S. eyes the First Filipino in more senses than one. Among his countrymen he had critics who deplored his dictatorial ways, but to thousands of other Filipinos he ranked with the great patriots. The Good...
Hours & Working Conditions. Yudin painted a rosy picture of the Soviet future: "Communist society will consist of cultured and developed people. As a result of technical development, the working day will be shortened and there will be more time for education.. Thus, the problem of 'professionalism' will solve itself. People will have time to acquire skill in many fields and be able to move about from one profession to another...
Being of the engineering profession, I was impressed by the profundity of the article, "For Nofer Trunnions" [TIME, April 15] ... in which the veil of secrecy was partially drawn from the "Turbo-Encabulator."