Word: objectively
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1930-1939
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Premier Goga had an answer. Under the nose of the U. S. Minister he waved a sheaf of protests cabled by U. S. Jewish organizations. "These," he cried, "are merely impudent!" To Mr. Ostrovsky, the Foreign Office replied with a public announcement: "The Rumanian Government would in no way object to the departure of the Soviet Ambassador at an even earlier date...
...hypothalatnus, a wedge-shaped object which serves as a clearing station for sense impressions coming in from the body...
...slowly descends nearer and nearer to the tender, bared flesh of the undergraduate neck, student red-corpuscle-pressure mounts steadily higher, and a kind of feverish anxiety speeds up the ordinarily sluggish tempo of daily life. Under these circumstances, time becomes an all-important and vital factor; the primary object of the day's curriculum is to employ every minute, even every second, on the well high insurmountable task of cramming all those important, little bits of academic wisdom into the old cranium. As the undergraduate hastily slips into the dining hall at 9:30, bolts down a few fried...
They were revived successfully, however, before the final examinations last spring, and were arranged with the object of including every course open regularly to Freshmen with an enrollment of over...
Manhattan's Metropolitan Opera Com-pany never considered Elektra a best seller. Yet when the opera was revived last week at the Met, a capacity audience, including silk hats and standees, gave it the lustiest ovation heard there in several seasons. Principal object of their applause: a dark, hefty Hungarian soprano. Rose Pauly. who heaved and panted through 15 curtain calls after her Metropolitan debut in the title role. Other objects : the sinister, pasty-faced Klytemnestra of Kerstin Thorborg; the brilliant conducting of Artur Bodanzky. Pauly, whose last year's appearance in a concert version of Elektra under...