Word: conductivity
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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...Bill. Though every Indian party now opposes the new Constitution which was so largely of Sir Samuel Hoare's making, he said of himself on becoming Foreign Secretary: "I think that scores of people will bear out my contention that, though many of them disagreed with my line of conduct, and felt that my proposals were unwise or ill-timed. I have ended my period with more personal friends, from Gandhi on the left to many Indian princes on the extreme right, than has any previous Secretary of State for India." A great statesman, a great Englishman...
...Dictator Mussolini. Declared the German Dictator: "Memel was stolen from Germany and the robbery legalized by the League of Nations!" Indicating that for the present he will not try to seize Memel from Lithuania, Orator Hitler characteristically waved his olive branch: "There can be only one yardstick for our conduct, our great, unshakable love for peace...
...variety of similar medical machines, ornamented with shiny chromium and nickel, dials, gauges, thermometers, bulbs, motors, rheostats, pedals, levers, knobs and buttons were working because 400 physicians who are sincerely trying to put physical therapy on a respectable basis in the U. S. met in Kansas City to conduct a Congress of Physical Therapy...
...from factories, preserving the American home, the schoolhouse and the dignity of labor, turns out in cold type to be so wild a collection of exaggerations and banalities as to make the broadest parody an understatement. The man who most fully exemplifies Author Wallis' conclusions regarding the proper conduct for a modern politician is Representative Hamilton Fish Jr. of New York. Passing all the tests of viewing with alarm, pointing with pride and gaining unfavorable publicity in the right places, Hamilton Fish Jr. impresses Author Wallis as the ideal candidate except for his Harvard education. He will, says Author...
...facilities offered at Brooks House, where 225 students, ate luncheon daily in crowded quarters, the commuters planned to establish a club similar to the Five-Fifteen Club at M. I. T. and to obtain central headquarters for dancing and other social functions. A complaint was furthermore lodged against the conduct of Brooks House athletics, which the commuters charged was kept in the hands of a few upperclassmen and confined largely to students living in Claverly Hall. The Club proposed to limit its membership to actual commuters and to organize its own teams for competition in intramural athletics...