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Word: foolishly (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...loft or make an electronic sculpture lies within a few blocks, among the tool-rental businesses of Greene Street, the lumberyards of Spring and Wooster, the hardware stores on West Broadway, and the bazaars of secondhand circuitry, gadgets and plastics that line Canal Street. It would be easy, and foolish, to sentimentalize SoHo into a kind of American Montparnasse, full of jolly creative gnomes secreting art and sharing the chili. The fact is that life there is, in general, considerably more agreeable than in Greenwich Village. Paradoxically, this is because SoHo is not officially residential. The very lack of amenities...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: The Last Studios | 7/5/1971 | See Source »

From the perspective of the '70s, it is all too easy to dismiss America's past isolationism as inevitably misguided and foolish. As Selig Adler points out in The Isolationist Impulse, the doctrine in many ways is "woven into the warp and woof of the American epic." From the very beginnings of the U.S., immigrants envisioned it as a way to a new existence. "They reasoned," Adler wrote of the colonists, "that God Himself had intended to divide the globe into separate spheres. America was the 'New Zion,' and Providence had severed this 'American Israel...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Time Essay: HOW REAL IS NEO-ISOLATIONISM? | 5/31/1971 | See Source »

...course a foolish notion that the same man who terminated the contract will act objectively on the findings of the review board," the faculty member said...

Author: By Robert Decherd, | Title: GSD Faculty Amends Procedures For Hearing Hartman Appeal Case | 5/24/1971 | See Source »

...that "every intelligent person comes to a stage in life... when he begins to question himself as to what purpose is there in life." For in his prior existence, "whatever a person's position or condition in life might be, whether this is a wise man or a foolish man, whether this is an educated man or an illiterate man, if he knows not his life's purpose, then he remains discontented...

Author: By Tony Hill, | Title: The People's Champion of the World | 5/5/1971 | See Source »

...workingman's family in Bridgeport, an Irish neighborhood in that South Side region known, without comment, as Back of the Yards. He was born to membership in the Hamburgs, an athletic club whose members took their exercise by beating the bejesus out of any blacks and Slavs foolish enough to stray onto the wrong side of the street. As young Hamburgs grew older, fatter and more sophisticated, the bonds of brotherhood held and forged a collective political power. The proto-mayor eventually used it to propel him into office...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Hamburg Heaven | 4/19/1971 | See Source »

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