Word: fullness
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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...fault, improvidence or ill luck, and even defects of character . . . Thus a developing humanitarian idea seems to think of repairing at someone's expense all loss to everyone, no matter how caused. It seems to presuppose that everyone must be able to expect a full economic and social life...
...since this income group is the part of U.S. society which pays heavy income taxes, people in this group would make up most of the deficits in even bigger income taxes. The well-to-do, if they chose to continue going to a nonparticipating doctor, would pay their full bills. In addition, they would be taxed for something they did not use-just like parents who pay school taxes and then send their children to private schools...
...then told Skardon the story of his life-without admitting espionage. When Skardon asked him to "unburden his mind and clear his conscience" by telling the full story, Fuchs snapped, "I will never be persuaded by you to talk...
...complacency ("We are winning the cold war"), inertia ("Wait for the dust to settle") and false security ("They'll never match our atomic stockpile"). With a combination of cold logic and hot passion that burns like dry ice, Burnham tries hard to arouse the free world to full realism and resolution. Burnham's argument...
Mullins also devoted considerable space to Thomas H. Eliot '28, full-time director of the Commission, whom he characterized as a "foremost advocate of liberalism" and an "original Roosevelt New Dealer...