Word: humanity
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Dates: during 1930-1939
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Also it seems to me that the unholy glee the 3 sgts. display in taking human life is more in keeping with young Mussolini rather than with the accepted opinion of the British Army...
...large quantities there in Aroostook. But it is readily lost if the potato is cooked after peeling. Vitamin C is readily soluble in water. We would seek to educate housewives to-use such water in the making of soup ... so that it may give its Vitamin C to the human system...
...scores of parents who have written in for advice, the News returns a stock, mimeographed answer: "We are unable to provide any information or advice regarding application of the technique to human beings." But unless his laboratory is fooling him, Publisher Patterson believes he can some day give a different answer. Says he: "Then maybe people will agree that we've been sitting on a big story here...
Last week, in the New Masses, Granville Hicks paid tribute to Hallowell's courage and discerned a lesson in his life: "You could not know Bob Hallowell without realizing the terrible human importance of the revolution. ... It means the release of human capacities that cannot function in the world we have now." Shocked and reminded, other devoted old friends such as Robert Benchley, Bruce Bliven, Walter Lippmann and Stark Young, sponsored an exhibition this week at the Reinhardt Galleries...
Harlowe Hardinge therefore invented a sensitive "electric ear" to replace human hearing. A parabolic reflector picks up the sound from the mill, focuses it on a microphone. If the sound is at the most efficient level, the microphone current keeps a galvanometer balanced between two contacts. If it rises or falls as little as one-quarter of a decibel, the galvanometer makes contact on one side or the other, closing a circuit which starts or stops the flow of ore as the situation requires. More than 75 of these electric ears are already...