Word: subjectively
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1950-1959
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...mainstream of news consists not only of the efforts and activities of statesmen. Indeed, such efforts and activities can be supported only by the currents of thought and culture springing from man's mind. This week TIME'S cover subject, British Sculptor Henry Moore, provides a significant case in point...
Perhaps even more remarkable was Khrushchev's personal flouting of the other Communist canon, whereby the servants of the people are impersonal, i.e., their private lives are of no consequence, hence are not subject to public inquiry. Last week, in an unprecedented bending to U.S. hunger for personalities, he posed for photographs with his whole family in the Kremlin. Khrushchev in the U.S.-for all the stirrings of conscience and stirrings of resentment among those who fiercely oppose his coming-will probably get more than his share of curious and chaotic attention (see below...
...last decade, this year was making an easygoing pitch for shorter working hours. But when pink-cheeked Economics Minister Ludwig Erhard appeared at the opening session and voiced a fervent appeal for longer, not shorter, hours, the delegates dutifully applauded and dropped the idea of a resolution on the subject...
...acquire the jurist's inhibitions. Critics see form first in a work of art; the average layman sees content. At Boston's Festival, viewers voted overwhelmingly for Gardner Cox's Robert Frost. Cox's portrait might be a bit fuzzy, but the subject had nobility, and that proved enough...
Canon Rea also quoted Pope John on the delicate subject of church unity. "In working for reunion," he said, "it is necessary1) to be very meek and humble, 2) to be patient and know how to wait God's hour, and 3) to insist on positive arguments, leaving aside for the moment those elements on which we differ, and to avoid discussions that may offend against the virtue of charity...