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Word: intellective (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1960-1969
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Usage:

Though he was 85 when he began these tours around Italy the North Coast of Africa, his age none of his enthusiasm for As the first man to devote his to connoisseurship, to authenticate paintings and drawings, B.B. approached his work and his life with and brilliance of intellect...

Author: By Ian Strasfogel, | Title: Berenson's Life-Enhancing Art | 9/30/1960 | See Source »

...vertebrate. It is a mollusk, a sort of sophisticated clam. Its brain evolved independently-and the octopus in many ways is an independent thinker. Last week University of Cambridge Zoologist Martin J. Wells was preparing to publish a fascinating study on a far-out subject: the octopus and its intellect...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Science: Octopus, Anyone? | 9/26/1960 | See Source »

...immigrant boy, became in turn an attorney, a federal bureaucrat, professor of the Harvard Law School, supplier of legal brains (Frankfurter's "happy hot dogs") to the New Deal and a guest professor at Oxford before his 1939 appointment to the Supreme Court. Along with an impressive intellect. Frankfurter has a sparrow's cockiness and a high-pitched, pedantic voice that often drives opponents to distraction. During the 19305 he was disliked and feared by conservatives as the legal strategist of F.D.R.'s onslaught on "economic royalists." As a member of the Supreme Court, on the contrary...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Obiter Dicta | 6/27/1960 | See Source »

...claims, drifted so far from the Democratic program of Franklin Roosevelt (and Harry Truman) that it cost the party at least 3,000,000 votes. Before the convention in 1956, Truman goes on, "I tried as gently as I could, to tell this man-so gifted in speech and intellect, and yet apparently so uncertain of himself and remote from people-that he had to learn how to communicate with the man in the street. I felt that I had failed. I realized more than ever . . . that his indecisiveness, unless overcome, would make him ineffectual as a President...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: HISTORICAL NOTES: Down Memory Lane with Truman | 5/30/1960 | See Source »

Fortunately, a third-rate intellect is not necessarily an altogether negligible artist. When Mr. Meyer conceptualizes his subject matter, he is lost; by embodying it directly in his characters, he makes Children of Darkness strangely compelling. It is not through what he tells us, but through what he shows us, that we catch a glimpse of evil as an absolute, an ingrained disposition towards total selfishness, a combination of the willingness and the ability to blight lives, rather than a mere evaluation derived from totaling up a number of acts. At moments, evil lives on Mr. Mayer's stage...

Author: By Julius Novick, | Title: Children of Darkness | 2/1/1960 | See Source »

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