Word: complexed
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...gold pieces from the Cocle graves include jewelry, masks, ear rings, helmets, breast ornaments, and plaques. Also in these graves were found gold breastplates embossed with mythological monsters, gold cuffs running in sheets from wrist to elbow, and complex castings of strange anthropomorphic gods...
...necessary element in education for modern life, this does not imply that one need have a zealot's interest in test-tubes and formulas, stresses and strains. For those whose passions are not aroused by the precise caress of the scientific goddess, little is gained by the manipulation of complex gadgets in the laboratory. A study of the history and philosophy of science would be for them far more significant...
...Into Your Dance (Warner) is a good-humored backstage musicomedy of which the two most noticeable ingredients are Ruby Keeler's legs and Al Jolson's mother complex. Since neither constitutes a novelty to U. S. cinema audiences, Go Into Your Dance is not likely to add to Warner Brothers' stature as the boldest experimenters in Hollywood. But. since both are legitimate embellishments for a story about an overconfident song-&-dance man regenerated by the good influence of a partner who keeps him sober and rescues him from the clutch of a gangster's wife (Helen...
...charge concerned his alleged failure to report $5,000,000 of income. In 1900 Mr. Mellon and his late Bother Richard put up $75,000 apiece to help two young engineers, Howard Hale McClintic and Charles Donnell Marshall, start a steel fabricating company. The Government contends that in the complex reorganization deal by which rich & potent McClintic-Marshall Construction Co. passed to Bethlehem Steel in 1931, Mr. Mellon should have paid a tax on the $6,300,000 in Bethlehem stocks & bonds which he received in payment. Mr. Mellon sold $1,300,000 worth of the bonds, now contends that...
...crotchets and then suddenly goes to pieces, even his physician will call his condition a nervous breakdown. Technically the businessman is suffering from a neurosis. He is not mad. Nor is he apt to go insane. His inability to cope with people and circumstances has thrown him into a complex mental-emotional turmoil and shaken his entire personality. With a patient, learned psychiatrist as his guide he may clamber out of the debacle and regain a stout hold on life. But the paths he takes must be peculiarly his own. for psychiatrists have not mapped all the bad lands...