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Word: paradoxically (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
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Usage:

Nick was popular and a paradox. On the surface, he was a roughhewn hellion, who prided himself in dressing sloppily, once showed up barefooted for a publicity picture. But Nick also had the squad's best scholastic record and liked to listen by the hour to classical operatic recordings. Planing to and from games, he would entertain his teammates by braying in a gravelly baritone the brokenhearted clown's famous lament from I Pagliacci...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sport: Death of an Iron Man | 12/10/1951 | See Source »

...food industry, nothing has caught on faster than frozen orange juice. Its sales have soared from an initial 225,000 gallons five years ago to an estimated 31 million this past year. But the paradox is that the more juice the industry sells, the less money it. makes. Last year, both Minute Maid and Snow Crop-the industry's big two-had a rough time. The trouble? The cost of oranges skyrocketed from 46? a box to $2.12, while at retail the industry has been racked by price wars which have recently forced juice producers to sell below cost...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: AGRICULTURE: Caught in the Squeezer | 11/19/1951 | See Source »

Buried here is Buckley's overwhelming fallacy. He says "...A researcher ought to be free to seek out his own conclusions, to make his own generalizations on the basis of his discoveries...It is a self-contained paradox to endow a researcher or a research organization with funds and to assert simultaneously what will come out of the investigations for which the funds are to be used. For obviously under such a formula, there is no reason for investigation to be undertaken at all." What Buckley terribly forgets is that the classroom is just as much a research organization...

Author: By Paul W. Mandel, | Title: God, Buckley, and Yale | 10/24/1951 | See Source »

Challenge & Paradox. For many Jews this will be a hard teaching. God has chosen them for a special purpose, but seemingly the price of God's election has been a bitter portion. Exile, humiliation and persecution have dogged them through history, from Babylon to Buchenwald. Persecution has driven the Jews in upon themselves; they have sometimes set up barriers against the world simply in order to survive. But of what use is their survival, asks Louis Finkelstein, if their mission is forgotten...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: A Trumpet for All Israel | 10/15/1951 | See Source »

...essence of that mission is a challenging paradox: to be a people set apart -and yet not apart. Louis Finkelstein calls on the withdrawn Jew to serve his old persecutors, his brothers, to join the human race; and calls on the assimilated Jew to take up his heritage...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: A Trumpet for All Israel | 10/15/1951 | See Source »

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