Word: propheteer
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...inside of a tiger cage, France last week held its first election since Gaston Doumergue took over the Premiership during the bloody riots which followed the Stavisky disclosures (TIME. Feb. 19). At stake were local provincial offices everywhere except in Paris. Month or so ago any political prophet would have said that the public's never-ceasing indignation at the corruption revealed by the "Stavisky affair" would be the major issue in any French election. But fortnight ago Papa Doumergue, in a drive to push through his proposed reforms of the French Constitution (TIME, Oct. 8), broadcast a new issue...
...Angeles heard the mature Klemperer last winter and Los Angeles pronounced him great for his Beethoven, his Brahms. He still looked like a dark, fanatic prophet but he had modified his gestures save for stirring climaxes when he jerked his head so violently that his ill-fitting glasses kept falling down his nose...
...substantially larger. Tom Girdler's statement meant that within a few years production would rise above the 1929 record of 56,000,000 tons. But by then, said Mr. Girdler, the country would be using steel "in a thousand ways that have never been dreamed of before." No idle prophet, he declared that his optimism squared with "facts that have been proved in our research laboratories, and tested out, from the standpoint of consumer acceptance, by salesmen in the field...
Dean Miner has not, by any means, been the sole prophet of Dental Medicine in the years since 1840, when the Medical profession rejected the proposal that the two fields be amalgamated. At Harvard, indeed, there have been many tangible instances of cooperation between the two departments since the founding of the Dental School in 1867. But as the first Dean of the Dental School ever to hold both the M.D. and D.M.D. degrees, and as one of the widest awake of his profession during the period which the experience of the war enlightened as to the possibilities of among...
This voice crying in the wilderness in that of L. L. B. Angas, a British financial prophet and weather-man who has the interesting habit of producing periodical manifestoes, predicting with unfailing accuracy important pending events in the world of international finance and commerce. He predicted, some months in advance of the actual date, the rubber market collapse of 1926, the English boom in the fall of 1931, and the world-wide rise in the price of gold shares. Now he is again gambling his reputation, this time with a booklet entitled "The Coming American Boom...