Word: searchingly
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...because the Socialist Party in the U. S., owners of the right to Polykushka, refused, for political precautions, to allow the picture to be revealed. A few months ago, they were prevailed upon to permit M. Nelidov to show his work. Then came weary months of pavement-pounding in search of an exhibitor. Finally, the Fifth Avenue Playhouse took the film under consideration. One bright day, the directors telephoned the good news to M. Nelidov at his dingy rooming-house. His picture would soon be seen by a U. S. public. From the other end of the wire came...
...seeker after romance immediately went to third section to the right of the mantel and began his search on the shelf at the level of his eyes...
...lives today. It is a characteristic of petty minds merely to seize what they can understand; and it seems that hundreds of petty minds must be writing biography today. Those that are afflicted with a conscience argue that their dissections are merely application of the scientific method in the search for truth. But there is truth and Truth. It is truth to say that Walt Whitman had perhaps half a dozen illegitimate children, and it is Truth that he was a truly great poet. The realist biographers are more interested in the petty truth...
...Marks. "Engines for Airplanes"; March 3, Professor Grinnell Jones '08, "Explosives and Fertilizers from the air"; March 10, Professor G. W. Pierce '01, "Electric Oscillations and Radio Communication; with demonstrations"; March 17, Professor G. F. Swain, "The Development of Steel Structures"; March 24, Professor D. H. McLaughlin, "The World Search for Metallic Ores"; March 31. Professor G. M. Fair, "Supplying Half a Billion Gallons a Day of Drinking Water"; April 7, Professor A. E. Wells, "Floating Metals from their Ores"; April 14, Mr. H. M. Turner '06, Lecturer on Water Power Engineering. "Utilization of Water Power...
...curse of systematization is to embrace the modern world it could well start with devising a means whereby these former exams might be found in less than an hour's search and under circumstances less akin to a subway rush. As matters stand the end is not worth the energy expended and the lessons of the past remain securely hidden by their supreme disorder from the students of the present. Experience may be a great teacher but her wisdom fails when her schoolbooks remain veiled from seeking eyes...