Word: differently
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...take this occasion to come to TIME's defense and to differ with Janet Lindsay Pollock in her letter concerning Fredric (Bickel) March that is published in the Feb. 20 issue of TIME. TIME states in its Nov. 28 issue, "Fredric March would have been vastly surprised a dozen years ago had anyone predicted that he would ever receive ... the Academy's Approval...
...avoid blows. In addition, blows not in themselves dangerous aggravated the meningo encephalitis [inflammation]." At Albany, New York State Senators chattered about repealing "Mayor" Walker's boxing laws, and safeguarding the health of boxers. At Boston, a Massachusetts State Senator filed a bill to forbid boxers who differ more than 15 lb. in weight striking each other. Meanwhile sports reporters gave clues which alert Medicine seemed likely to heed. Grantland Rice observed: "Head punching has left in its wake a long line of shambling, goofy, punch-drunk fighters who walk about on their heels in the paper doll ward...
...course the obvious answer to this sort of reasoning is that it is impossible to treat anything as a work of art unless it be thoroughly understood; which is only possible after long and careful study of the many details in which the ancient languages differ from modern. This work must be preliminary to any broader treatment of literature...
...blazing into heat & light, that as far as we can see the universe is expanding, and some eon may become dull chaos, as the Cambridge physicists reason. But, if we use Einsteinian concepts, we realize that heat & light are ponderable, that the heat & light of an airplane in flight differ subtly from the heat & light of a household furnace, that gravity may entrain the heat & light emitted by blazing stars. In such case, gravity catches hold of the whole expanding universe, pulls it together until constrained energy becomes too tense to hold. Thereupon a new cycle of expansion ensues...
...must differ with Dr. Holcombe on this point; I believe that the youth of the country is more sensitive to the present slump than are the older people, who appear to sit dazedly by and trust in God and Mr. Roosevelt to wake them up. Youth has looked upon the situation and has divided into two camps--one which has thought the whole thing out and has turned to him who offers the most plausible plan for relief; and another which bleats of its magnificent open-mindedness and blindly rushes into Socialism...