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...being too small, Mr. Campbell again mistakenly applies a private insurance concept to social insurance, but even worse he creates the impression that this social insurance system is not financially sound. The truth is that it is fully self-sustaining for all time to come. This allegation comes with singular ill-grace from a spokesman for a so-called pay-as-you-go plan which of course would completely abolish any long-range financing and make benefits dependent upon year to year appropriations...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Altmeyer Replies to Campbell | 1/6/1954 | See Source »

...instructor in journalism at a nearby girls' school in Newton, I was naturally interested in the use of the word "world" by Publisher Fox. As a former reporter for the Post, I felt impelled to write him a letter asking his authority for the plural verb with his singular noun...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE WORLD IN A SILVER FOX COAT | 12/14/1953 | See Source »

...have done so. Century gives us WORLD--Mankind, or the public generally (as, the whole world knows it); also (as, the world worships success). Webster (Mr. Fox's authority) says, for Collective noun. Gram. A noun naming a collection or aggregate of individuals by a singular form (assembly, army, jury). When the designated collection is thought of as a whole, the noun takes a singular verb. (Mr. Fox said: "the world, by and large."). It strikes me that Mr. Fox has confounded the editorial ""we' with his many other activities and now regards himself as a collective noun, but even...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: THE WORLD IN A SILVER FOX COAT | 12/14/1953 | See Source »

...exultation comes to a halt with the discussion of McCarthysim and the age of suspicion. Wechsler's closing pages bear a depressing resemblance to the opening ones of a 1936 novel on dictatorship in America by Singular Lewis. Entitled It Can't Happen Here, Lewis' work tells how it could happen here. His hero, Doremus Jesseup, is a newspaperman not unlike Wechsler, and his dictator is a politician named Berzelius Windrip. In Wechsler's age of suspicion, an embryonic Windrip is incubating; only a cessation of panic and a new faith in freedom, the editor of the Post warns...

Author: By Richard A. Burgheim, | Title: The Age of Suspicion | 12/3/1953 | See Source »

...command ordered a change to "socialist realism." But Guttuso had progressed a long way from his first tortured attempts to illustrate the party line (TIME, Oct. 2, 1950). "Of all those who participate in the neo-realistic current," wrote the critic of Fiera Letteraria, "Guttuso stands alone . . . with his singular and exemplary force of composition." The public liked Renato's new work, too; most of the pictures were sold in two weeks...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Party-Line Painter | 11/30/1953 | See Source »

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