Word: directe
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Dates: during 1920-1929
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...partner of famed Law yer Choate; now he makes a hobby of Church History and Canon Law. In Albany, Governor Smith read the questions, promised to make a fair and complete answer. The essential conflict that Governor Smith faces is : The Roman Catholic Church maintains that in a direct conflict between the laws of Church and State, the jurisdiction of the Church prevails. Thus Pope Pius IX in a syllabus asserted: "To say in the case of conflicting laws that the civil law prevails, is an error." Pope Leo XIII in an encyclical letter wrote: "Over the mighty multitude...
Chiang Kai-shek explained his plan. It depended on his ability to fire his 10,000 soldiers with sufficient enthusiasm to follow him in a direct frontal attack on the walled city of Waichow during which they would nearly all most certainly be killed...
...invention was a "quarter-in-the-slot" machine. Out of it comes, not gum or hairpins, but a strip of eight sepia photographs, each 2 in. x 1½ in., showing the quarter-dropper in whatever eight poses it has pleased him to strike. The pictures are photographed direct upon sensitized paper. To make a strip of eight pictures requires only eight minutes. A syndicate of men successful enough to know a real gold brick when they see one-including onetime Ambassador to Turkey Henry Morgenthau, President James G. Harbord of the Radio Corp. of America, John T. Underwood (typewriters...
...hard questions to ask, are expected from all over the world at an "institute" or congress to be held at Pennsylvania State College by the American Chemical Society next July. Last week the Society's president, Dr. George D. Rosengarten of Philadelphia, appointed a committee to arrange and direct the institute's program. Since pure research is now being pursued as vigorously by industry as in academe, it was not surprising to find more industrial employes than college professors on the committee, which included: Dean Gerald L. Wendt of physics and chemistry at Penn State; Professor Frank...
...included in any reasonable plan for concentration and distribution. He should by all means concentrate in the field that most interests him; and because his life work is to be in science it would seem wise for him to choose a field that is not in the direct line of preparation for his life work, such as arts, letters, history, and philosophy. If he has no sufficiently keen interest outside of science, it would in general be better to utilize his concentration to prepare for his professional studies which he can do in a variety of ways. He can then...