Word: wealth
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...Cardinal Schuster granted him the use of the cathedral. It was not nearly big enough. A throng of 300,000 came to hear him call upon Italy to "give the world a new age of Christian individualism wherein the wealthy, like the early Christians, gladly share their excess wealth. . . . Woe to the rich man who does not hear the call. Woe to the poor man who angrily nourishes hate and dreams of violence.. . . The age of love is approaching...
Considering the wealth of possible reading, it would be unfair to an instructor's particular inclinations to make all sections identical, equally comprehensive in scope. Although this might placate the sufferings of a misplaced student, it would be only a pony duplication of English 1. Much more feasibly, the English Department should announce each section's Spring reading a few days before Ab registration. The student would be assured of a more valuable course, the instructor a more receptive class. If overloadings resulted, second or third choices could be satisfied. Three hundred men changed their sections last term...
Describing the rapid growth of American music since 1880. Hanson listed four elements necessary for a "golden age:" a wealth of creative talent, ample educational opportunities for the young composer, a "natural" relationship between composer and performer, and a willing and interested audience for new music...
Hung on the framework of a real case which could not be more exciting, the picture presents a wealth of argument towards "One World." Yet this is not the painfully obvious propaganda that Hollywood is so prone to wallow in. The moral is not forced down our throats, but contained naturally in a factual document, and thereby carries all the more weight. As a matter of fact, the film had its premiere before the UN at Lake Success. Movies like this are what make the condition of the American moving picture industry seem not so hopeless after all. E.P.R...
Sustained narrative requires a wealth of the kind of detail that newspapers and press associations do not ordinarily carry. In 1929, when TIME sent its first correspondent, David Hulburd, to Chicago, it began to discover that narrative quality could be greatly improved by TIME'S own on-the-spot reporting...