Word: mindedly
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1920-1929
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Leonardo is one of the most versatile and fascinating figures in all history. His eager restlessness of spirit was typically Renaissance, but his mind belonged more to the twentieth century than...
...annually, half of which go to each university as long as the two institutions continue to cooperate in the publication of "Art Studies". In making the gift, Mr. Sachs said "the creation of this foundation will, I hope, serve to emphasize, among graduates as well as in the public mind, the obvious fact that great universities are bound in friendship through their scholarship relations even more firmly than through their equally desirable relations on the athletic field...
...when more and more national advertising is appearing in newspapers, when magazines generally are viewing with concern the amount of newspaper space taken by national advertisers, your announcement of these two newspaper campaigns, considerable in their amount and important in their significance, is, to my mind, a tribute to the honesty of your broadminded, impartial editorial policy...
...reflection of gas molecules, the Brownian movement in gasses and the absorption of X-rays. But, like Scientist Steinmetz, he sees no conflict between science and religion. The blood of staunch, God-fearing New Englanders runs in his veins. His father was a Congregational minister. Queried about the cosmic mind, Dr. Millikan retorted: "Why not say 'God'? . . . I have never known a thinking man who did not believe in God. . . . Science without religion obviously may become a curse rather than a blessing to mankind, but science dominated by the spirit of religion is the key to progress...
...frail, twisted figure of a man hobbles into the House of Commons. Doorkeepers pity his crippled body, and portals open as the tapping thump of his two rubber-tipped canes approaches. But statesmen do not pity the Right Honorable Philip Snowden. They respect the power and swiftness of his mind, fear the sting of his unpleasant, rasping tongue. He, as Britain's only Laborite Chancellor of the Exchequer, presented a maiden budget (TIME, May 12, 1924), so clear and masterful that cheers rang from every quarter of the House. Now, since Labor has gone out and Conservatism come...