Word: socialism
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...started in 1875 by an anonymous group of millionaires who pooled $60,000,000 to fight the "Hidden Rulers of the World." Purpose of the Hidden Rulers was and is to massacre 400,000,000 intelligent, right-thinking members of the globe's population, install a new social order in which all but the 40,000 Rulers will be reduced to the status of slaves. The last World War, a preliminary, was arranged by the Hidden Rulers to try out their machinery. The next and final World War, originally scheduled for this October, has been postponed because of mysterious...
...modest estimate of its publishers, Funk & Wagnalls, since its first printing in 1922, Etiquette has sold "many more than 500,000 copies." Last week this 15-year-old youngster among best sellers came from the presses in its first completely revised edition, a new 860-page book on social ceremonial...
...coming Catholic University of America (Washington, D. C.), only U. S. pontifical university,* announced that its School of Social Work will be enlarged, called the School of Social Science. Significantly, its first dean will be a famed Catholic New Dealer: Rt. Rev. Monsignor Francis Joseph Haas. Monsignor Haas has since 1933 served on the NRA's Labor Advisory Board, the National Labor Board, the National Committee on Business & Labor Standards, WPA's Labor Policies Board. He has been surpassed only by Edward McGrady as a mediator in strikes, serving notably in the Minneapolis truckmen's strike...
...Francis Seminary in Milwaukee and member of the State Labor Board. He returns to Catholic University, where in 1922 he took his Ph.D. with a thesis on "Mediation in the Men's Garment Industry," to emphasize the Church's economic teachings, train priests and laymen in organizing social-minded Catholic groups, apply moral laws to economic life. At the University Monsignor Haas will encounter, among other kindred priests, a newly-appointed philosophy professor, Monsignor George Barry O'Toole, founder of the Catholic Radical Alliance in Pittsburgh (TIME, June...
...vigorous unofficial body of U. S. Episcopalians, comparable to the radical Methodist Federation for Social Service, is the Church League for Industrial Democracy. For more than a decade its executive secretary has been an amiable, youngish man named Rev. William Benjamin (''Bill") Spofford, managing editor of The Witness, who rarely wears clericals and once, between parishes, drove a payroll truck in Chicago to support his wife and child. The C. L. I. D., whose president is Bishop Edward Lambe Parsons of California and whose vice president is Bishop Benjamin Brewster of Maine. hates War, Fascism, deplores Capitalism...