Word: followings
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Dates: during 1950-1950
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...excoriated by the tourists, and between teaching, instructing, exhorting and advising the village people, we read TIME from cover to cover, to our own amazement. If we should tell you that we are educating ourselves politically, that we sit down in earnest and quiet with atlas and history and follow your correspondents around the world; that our young son reads TIME as religiously as he does his Calvert lessons; that we feel we have a private periscope to search the wide horizons which stretch from this minuscule point of vantage, it makes dull reading but true...
BUCKLEY: The graduates of Yale and other universities which follow similar policies will be easy prey to the propagandists who insist that collectivization and various degrees of Socialism are all we need to make our economy stronger. These unguided men will be useful men to the leftist cause...
...fire-engine red Jeepster, Greenberg hustled relief pitchers out of Cleveland's bull pen, got them to the mound in a matter of seconds compared to the ambling three to five minutes usually required. Less colorful, but equally timesaving, were two other Greenberg suggestions which the Indians now follow: 1) make a pitcher wait his batting turn in the "on deck" circle instead of in the dugout, and 2) make him go to the mound more promptly at the start of each inning. These stunts, the Cleveland management figured, had already cut the time of games by something like...
Like dodecacophonists the world over, Istrian-born Composer Dallapiccola has had a rough road to follow. He has gained an international reputation, says one Florentine critic, "[simply] because he is connected musically to international trends." At home, he has won critical respect because, as another critic puts it, "There is no aridity in Dallapiccola . . . Very few musicians feel with so much intensity and sorrow . . . the tremendous tragedy of our times." But, like the twelve-tone work of U.S. composers, his lyrical but contorted music has still to win the affection of the public. Says Dallapiccola himself: "The public...
...Russian radio listener, it is no easy job to follow the VOA. He must keep his hand on his tuning knobs and skip from frequency to frequency as the battle of the wave bands rages over his head. Do many try? Herrick thinks they do. Like any other people, he says, the Russians enjoy doing something the government tells them...