Word: savely
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...Catholic Church are both producers," says retired Banker Martindell. "Standard Oil produces oil and the church produces a way of life and a way of thought, but they both have production problems. Take a missionary-it's my belief that a man who practices good management will probably save more souls than a man who doesn't.'' So, in December 1948, with the astonished acquiescence of the Vatican, Episcopalian Martindell had an audience with the Pope and went to work...
...Charlie Dawes-with no inkling of what World War II's demands were about to do to his cherished budget -roared up out of private life to prophesy: "Some day a President, if he is to save the country from bankruptcy and its people from ruin, must make the old fight all over again, and this time the battle will be waged against desperate disadvantages. Against him will be arrayed the largest, strongest and most formidably entrenched army of interested Government spenders, wasters and patronage-dispensing politicians the world has ever known...
...they misunderstand. It's not like that really. I feel that everything I do is for Him, and that includes wrestling." When a Bethlehem fan asks Ike for his autograph, he follows his signature with the words, Galatians 6:14 ("But God forbid that I should glory, save in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ...
...always is the embezzler an underling trying to pad out a slim paycheck. When the president of Chicago's MidAmerican Steel Warehouse saw his profits slumping deeper and deeper, he decided to make one final effort to save his business. To bring in new working capital he took more than $100,000 and went on a gambling expedition to Las Vegas. MidAmerican went bankrupt anyway...
...Littlest Outlaw (Walt Disney) is what the trade calls a "wetback," i.e., a Hollywood picture made in Mexico to save money. The story is all about a little Mexican boy (Andres Velasques) and a big chestnut horse that kiss each other. When the horse is condemned to death by its master (Pedro Armendariz), the little boy steals it and becomes what the title so stickily suggests. He hides the horse successively in a smithy, a barbershop, a ruined hacienda, a boxcar, a church. In transit, the camera takes the usual tourist shots of cactus, fiestas, religious processions, fireworks, cactus. They...