Word: sadnesses
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...sad sign of the times when an alumnus of this College, be he David Schine or Beelzebub, is so muck-raked in the CRIMSON as to his private life and habits while at College. For the author of the article to go around questioning Schine's tradesmen, janitors, roommates and even his Radcliffe girl-friends, is to show that he is training himself for work not unlike the public life of Mr. Schine himself...
...which we all must fish." As U.S. industry has outgrown the proprietor-owned and operated companies of old, and as organized labor has gained in strength, more and more corporations have recognized the need for being understood by their employees, stockholders and the public at large. Yet the sad fact is that industry has lost ground in its public-relations campaign...
...sad occasion for a Catholic when he reads of Bishop Sheil's attack ... As for America being in danger of losing its sense of humor, well, I-with my experience of living under Fascism and Communism-have lost mine a time ago. And so did almost a half of the world's population ... As for "a monstrous perversion of morality," Bishop Sheil should have asked some of the G.I.s tortured in the Chinese P.W. camps or some of the priest refugees for advice...
...hard-eyed and knowing script written by her sister, famed French Novelist Colette (who took her story from a 1949 English novel, Olivia, by an anonymous author). The movie tells of a lonely English teenager, Olivia, who is sent to a French finishing school. From the first day, sad little Olivia joins in the twitter of happiness that seems to fill her new world. She is too young to understand the possibilities of evil that...
Time and frustration had blurred the towering, bony frame and added flesh to the sad falcon face. But the manner was still much the same-the haughtiness, the imperious pride and, over it all, the toga of weary martyrdom. He strode in past the painted nudes and mirrored walls of Paris' Hotel Continental to a burst of applause. Hundreds of his admirers, as they always do, had clustered around the dais and monopolized most of the seats at the press conference, leaving newsmen to find seats where they could...